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Al-Awasim

Al-ʿAwāṣim (Arabic: العواصم, "the defences, fortifications"; sing. al-ʿāṣimah, اَلْـعَـاصِـمَـة, "protectress") was the Arabic term used to refer to the Muslim side of the frontier zone between the Byzantine Empire and the Umayyad and Abbasid Caliphates in Cilicia, northern Syria and Upper Mesopotamia.[2] It was established in the early 8th century, once the first wave of the Muslim conquests ebbed, and lasted until the mid-10th century, when it was overrun by the Byzantine advance. It comprised the forward marches, comprising a chain of fortified strongholds, known as al-thughūr (اَلـثُّـغُـوْر; sing. al-thagr, اَلـثَّـغْـر, "cleft, opening"), and the rear or inner regions of the frontier zone, which was known as al-ʿawāṣim proper. On the Byzantine side, the Muslim marches were mirrored by the institution of the kleisourai districts and the akritai border guards.

Thughur and Awasim
اَلـثُّـغُـوْر وَالْـعَـوَاصِـم
al-thughūr wa-l-ʿawāṣim
Cilicia, northern Syria and Upper Mesopotamia
TypeFortified border zone
Site information
Controlled byAbbasid Caliphate (750s–c. 930), Ikhshidids (c. 935–940s), Hamdanids (940s–962s), Mamluks of Egypt (14th century–1516)
Site history
Built8th century
Built byAbbasid Caliphate, Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt
In usec. 750sc. 962s, 14th century–1514
Garrison information
Garrison25,000 in c. 780[1]

The term thughūr was also used in the marches of al-Andalus and Mawara al-Nahr, and survived in historical parlance, to be revived by the Egyptian Mamluks in the 14th century, when the areas traditionally comprising the 'ʿawāṣim and thughūr in northern Syria and the northern Euphrates region came under their control.[3]

Arab–Byzantine frontier zone edit

Creation of the frontier zone edit

Already from late 630s, after the rapid Muslim conquest of Syria, a wide zone, unclaimed by either Byzantines or Arabs and virtually deserted (known in Arabic as al-Ḍawāḥī (اَلـدَّوَاحِي, "of the Outer Lands") and in Greek as ta akra (τὰ ἄκρα, "the extremities") emerged between the two powers in Cilicia, along the southern approaches of the Taurus and Anti-Taurus mountain ranges, leaving the Anatolian plateau in Byzantine hands. Both Emperor Heraclius (r. 610–641) and the Caliph ʿUmar (r. 634–644) pursued a strategy of destruction within this zone, trying to transform it into an effective barrier between their realms.[2][4] Nevertheless, the ultimate aim of the caliphs remained the outright conquest of Byzantium, as they had done with its provinces in Syria, Egypt and North Africa, and it was only the failure of the Second Arab Siege of Constantinople in 717–718 that forced a revision of this strategic objective: although raids into Anatolia continued, the goal of conquest was abandoned, and the border between the two powers began to acquire more permanent features. For the next two centuries, border fortresses might change hands between Byzantines and Arabs, but the basic outline of the Arab–Byzantine border remained essentially unaltered.[5][6][7] Thus the term al-thughūr, which initially meant "fissures, clefts" (cf. their Greek name ta Stomia, τὰ Στόμια, "the mouths/openings") and designated the actual borderlands, came to mean "boundaries", employed in phrases like Thughūr al-Islām (ثُـغُـوْر الْإِسْـلَام, "Boundary of Islam") or Thughūr al-Rūmīya (الثُّغُور الرُّومِيَّة, "Boundary of the Rūm").[2][8][9]

 
Map of the Byzantine-Arab frontier zone in southeastern Asia Minor, with the major fortresses

This process was marked by a gradual consolidation of the previously deserted zone and its transformation into a settled and fortified borderland, especially after the Byzantines abandoned Cilicia during the reign of Caliph Abd al-Malik (r. 685–705). The Muslims began to move into the area, reoccupying and repairing the abandoned towns and forts. The process began under the Umayyads, but intensified under the first Abbasids, especially during the rule of Harun al-Rashid (r. 786–809).[2][7] Thus a line of forts was gradually established, stretching from Tarsus (Ar. Ṭarsūs) on the Mediterranean coast to Malatya (Ar. Malaṭiyā, Gr. Melitene) and Kamacha (Ar. Ḥiṣn Kamkh) on the upper course of the Euphrates.[10][11][12] These were located at strategic choke points, located at the intersections of major roads or at the mouths of important passes.[13]

Administrative organization and settlements edit

The entire frontier zone was initially part of the jund (one of the military administrative divisions into which Muslim Syria was divided) of Homs. After 680 it formed part of the new jund of Qinnasrin (Gr. Chalkis), until Harun al-Rashid established a separate jund al-ʿAwāṣim (جُـنْـد الْـعَـوَاصِـم) in 786, covering the entire region from the Byzantine border in the north and west to the Euphrates in the east and a line running south of Antioch (Ar. Anṭākiya), Aleppo (Ar. Ḥalab, Gr. Berroia) and Manbij (Gr. Hierapolis). Manbij and later Antioch were the new province's capitals.[2][13][14] The al-ʿAwāṣim proper served as the second defensive line behind the Thughūr, stretching across northern Syria and comprising the towns of Baghras, Bayās, Dulūk (Gr. Doliche or Telouch), Alexandretta (Ar. Iskandarīya), Cyrrhus (Ar. Qūrus), Ra'bān and Tīzīn.[2][10] The Thughūr, the actual frontier zone, was divided into the Cilician or Syrian (al-Thughūr al-Sha'mīya, اَلـثُّـغُـوْر الـشَّـأْمِـيَّـة) and the Jaziran or Mesopotamian (al-Thughūr al-Jazīrīya, اَلـثُّـغُـوْر الْـجَـزِيْـرِيَّـة) sectors, roughly separated by the Amanus mountains. There was no overall governor or administrative centre for the Thughūr, although Tarsus and Malatya emerged as the most important towns in Cilicia and the Mesopotamian sector respectively. The towns of the Thughūr came variously under the administrative control of the jund al-ʿAwāṣim or functioned as separate districts; the situation is complicated by the fact that by the 10th century, the terms Thughūr and al-ʿAwāṣim were often used interchangeably in the sources.[2][15][16] In addition, from the early 10th century, with the Byzantine advance into Armenia, the frontier around Diyār Bakr became a third sector, al-Thughūr al-Bakrīya (الـثُّـغُـوْر الـبَـكْـرِيَّـة).[17]

In the Cilician sector, Mopsuestia (Ar. al-Maṣṣīṣa) was the first city to be re-occupied and garrisoned, already under the Umayyads, who settled 300 soldiers there in 703, a number raised under the first Abbasids to some 4,000. Adana followed in 758–760, and Tarsus in 787/8. Tarsus quickly became the largest settlement in the region and the Arabs' most important base of operations against the Byzantines, counting between 4,000 and 5,000 troops in its garrison. Other important fortresses in Cilicia, which however were little more than military outposts, were 'Ayn Zarba (Gr. Anazarbus), al-Hārūniya, founded by Harun al-Rashid, Tall Gubair and al-Kanīsat al-Sawdā. These were complemented by smaller forts dotted across the Cilician plain, holding smaller garrisons of a dozen or so men.[11][17][18] In the more mountainous terrain of the Mesopotamian frontier zone, the main strongholds were located in the fertile parts of relatively isolated valleys, controlling the entrances of passes over the mountains: Mar'ash (Gr. Germanikeia), rebuilt already under Muawiyah I (r. 661–680) and again under Harun al-Rashid, al-Ḥadath (Gr. Adata), likewise refortified by the first Abbasid caliphs and provided with 4,000 troops, and Malatya, which had been colonized by the Umayyads, destroyed by the Byzantines and rebuilt again and likewise garrisoned with 4,000 men in 757/8. Further fortresses of lesser importance in the Mesopotamian sector were Salaghus, Kaisum, Ḥiṣn Zibaṭra (Gr. Zapetra/Sozopetra), Sumaisaṭ (Gr. Samosata), Ḥiṣn Qalawdhiya and Ḥiṣn Ziyad. Some of the northern fortresses of the al-ʿAwāṣim province, like Dulūk or Cyrrhus, were also sometimes included in it. Further north, the relatively isolated fortress towns of Qālīqalā (Gr. Theodosiopolis, modern Erzurum) and Kamacha formed the northernmost outposts of Muslim rule.[17][18][19] The Thughūr al-Bakrīya included, according to Qudama ibn Ja'far, Sumaisaṭ, Ḥānī, Malikyan, Gamah, Ḥaurān and al-Kilis.[17]

"...from all the great towns within the borders of Persia and Mesopotamia, and Arabia, Syria, Egypt, and Morocco, there is no city but has in Tarsus a hostelry for its townsmen, where the warriors for the Faith from each particular country live. And, when they have once reached Tarsus, they settle there and remain to serve in the garrison; among them prayer and worship are most diligently performed; from all hands, funds are sent to them, and they receive alms rich and plentiful; also there is hardly a sultan who does not send hither some auxiliary troops."

Ibn Hawqal's description of Tarsus as a centre for jihad against Byzantium[20]

The caliphs repopulated the area by bringing in colonists and regular soldiers from Syria but also Persians, Slavs, Arab Christians, and people from the eastern edges of the Muslim world: settlers from Khurasan, the Turkic Sayābija tribe or Jatts (Ar. Zuṭṭ) from India.[21][22] The regular troops stationed there were favoured with lower taxes (the tithe or ʿushr instead of the kharāj land tax), higher pay and small land grants (qaṭā'i). In early Abbasid times these troops numbered some 25,000, half of them drawn from Khurasan and the rest from Syria and Upper Mesopotamia. They were complemented by volunteers, drawn by the religious motivation of jihad against the Byzantines but often paid a salary by the state as well.[18][23][24] All this entailed a heavy financial burden on the Abbasid government. Under Harun al-Rashid, taxation from the Cilician sector brought in 100,000 gold dinars every year, which were all spent locally for public works, salaries, espionage etc. In addition, the costs of cross-border expeditions typically ranged between 200,000 and 300,000 dinars annually. The Mesopotamian sector's revenue amounted to some 70,000 dinars, to which the central government added 120,000–170,000 dinars each year for the upkeep of the fortifications and the salary of the frontier troops.[25]

Military operations edit

By the 9th century, the Arab raiding expeditions launched against Byzantium from the frontier zone had gradually assumed an almost ritual character and were strictly organized. According to Qudama ibn Ja'far, the conventional pattern of Arab incursions included a first expedition in spring (10 May–10 June), when horses could find abundant fodder, followed after about a month's rest by a summer raid (10 July–8 September), usually the main campaign of the year, and sometimes by a winter raid in February–March.[10][26][27] The importance of these raids is summarized by Islamic scholar Hugh N. Kennedy: "the ṣāʿifa (summer raid) was as much a part of the symbolic and ritual functions of the Caliph as was organising and providing leadership for the annual hajj to Mecca".[28]

The frontier zone was fiercely contested between the Arabs and the Byzantines. Raids and counter-raids were a permanent fixture of this type of warfare. Forts on either side of the notional frontier were captured and razed, or sometimes occupied, but never for long. As a result, the region was often depopulated, necessitating repeated resettlement. There is nevertheless evidence of some prosperity, based on agriculture and commerce, especially during the second half of the 9th century, when the borderlands became a node in a commercial route linking Basra with northern Syria and even Constantinople.[21][29] After 842 and for most of the later 9th century, the decline of Abbasid power meant that control over the Thughūr gradually devolved to semi-independent border emirates, chiefly Tarsus, Malatya and Qālīqalā, which were left largely to fend on their own against a resurgent Byzantium. The Battle of Lalakaon in 863 broke the power of Malatya, altering the balance of power in the region, and signalled the beginning of a gradual Byzantine encroachment on the Arab borderlands.[30][31][32]

With the onset of the Abbasid Caliphate's terminal period of crisis after 928, control of the Muslim frontier cities shifted to the Ikhshidid and Hamdanid dynasties. In the 930s, under the leadership of John Kourkouas, the Byzantines broke through and conquered Malatya and most of the Mesopotamian sector of the Thughūr. Although the Hamdanid emir of Aleppo, Sayf al-Dawla (r. 946–967), managed to stem the Byzantine advance, his success was only temporary: in 964–965, Emperor Nikephoros II Phokas (r. 963–969) captured Cilicia, followed soon after by Antioch, while the Hamdanids of Aleppo became a tributary state.[30][33][34][35]

Mamluk–Turkmen frontier zone edit

After their conquest of Syria in the late 13th century, the Egyptian Mamluks re-established the al-thughūr wa-l-ʿawāṣim as a defensive zone to shield Syria from the Turkoman states of Asia Minor and the Caucasus, including at a later stage the Ottoman Empire. Like the earlier model, the thughūr were divided into a Syrian and a Mesopotamian march, as well as a rear zone along northern Syria. The Mamluks entrusted the defence of the Syrian/Cilician march to the client Turkmen principality of the Ramadanids, while the Dulkadirid principality fulfilled the same role in the Mesopotamian thughūr. To safeguard their control of the frontier zone, and to keep the two client beyliks separated and under control, the Mamluks also retained garrisons in seven strategically important sites: Tarsus, Ayas, Serfendikar, Sis, Darende, Malatya and Divriği.[36] Ahmad al-Qalqashandi gives the subdivisions (niyābāt) of the Mamluk thughūr as follows: eight for the Syrian sector (Malatya, Divriği, Darende, Elbistan, Ayas, Tarsus and Adana, Serfendikar and Sis) and three on the Euphrates sector (al-Bira, Qal'at Ja'bar and al-Ruha).[3][37]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Kennedy (2001), pp. 97–98
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Streck (1987), p. 515
  3. ^ a b Honigmann (1987), p. 739
  4. ^ Kaegi (1995), pp. 236–244
  5. ^ Kaegi (1995), pp. 246–247
  6. ^ Toynbee (1973), pp. 108–109
  7. ^ a b Whittow (1996), p. 212
  8. ^ El-Cheikh (2004), p. 84
  9. ^ Honigmann (1987), p. 738
  10. ^ a b c El-Cheikh (2004), p. 83
  11. ^ a b Wheatley (2000), pp. 260–261
  12. ^ Vasiliev (1935), pp. 94–96
  13. ^ a b Kazhdan (1991), p. 238
  14. ^ Wheatley (2000), p. 116
  15. ^ Honigmann (1987), pp. 738–739
  16. ^ Wheatley (2000), pp. 116, 260
  17. ^ a b c d Honigmann (1935), pp. 42–43
  18. ^ a b c Kennedy (2001), pp. 82, 98
  19. ^ Wheatley (2000), p. 261
  20. ^ Toynbee (1973), pp. 114–115
  21. ^ a b Streck (1987), pp. 515–516
  22. ^ Wheatley (2000), pp. 116–117, 261
  23. ^ Wheatley (2000), p. 262
  24. ^ Toynbee (1973), p. 113
  25. ^ Vasiliev (1935), pp. 96–97
  26. ^ Toynbee (1973), p. 115
  27. ^ Whittow (1996), pp. 212–213
  28. ^ Kennedy (2001), p. 106
  29. ^ Wheatley (2000), pp. 116–117, 262–263
  30. ^ a b Streck (1987), p. 516
  31. ^ Toynbee (1973), pp. 110–111, 113–114
  32. ^ Whittow (1996), pp. 310–311
  33. ^ Kazhdan (1991), p. 1479
  34. ^ Wheatley (2000), pp. 116, 261
  35. ^ Whittow (1996), pp. 317–318, 326–329
  36. ^ Har-El (1995), pp. 43–47
  37. ^ Har-El (1995), p. 44

Sources edit

  • Canard, M. (1960). "al-ʿAwāṣim". In Gibb, H. A. R.; Kramers, J. H.; Lévi-Provençal, E.; Schacht, J.; Lewis, B. & Pellat, Ch. (eds.). The Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition. Volume I: A–B. Leiden: E. J. Brill. pp. 761–762. OCLC 495469456.
  • El-Cheikh, Nadia Maria (2004). Byzantium Viewed by the Arabs. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard Center for Middle Eastern Studies. ISBN 0-932885-30-6.
  • Har-El, Shai (1995). Struggle for Domination in the Middle East: The Ottoman-Mamluk War, 1485–91. BRILL. ISBN 978-90-04-10180-7.
  • Honigmann, Ernst (1935). Byzance et les Arabes, Tome III: Die Ostgrenze des Byzantinischen Reiches von 363 bis 1071 nach griechischen, arabischen, syrischen und armenischen Quellen. Corpus Bruxellense Historiae Byzantinae (in German). Brussels: Éditions de l'Institut de philologie et d'histoire orientales. OCLC 6934222.
  • Honigmann, E. (1987) [1927]. "AL-THUGHŪR". In Houtsma, Martijn Theodoor (ed.). E.J. Brill's First Encyclopaedia of Islam, 1913–1936, Volume VIII: Ṭa'if–Zūrkhāna. Leiden: BRILL. pp. 738–739. ISBN 90-04-08265-4.
  • Kaegi, Walter Emil (1995). Byzantium and the Early Islamic Conquests. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-48455-8.
  • Kazhdan, Alexander, ed. (1991). The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-504652-8.
  • Kennedy, Hugh (2001). The Armies of the Caliphs: Military and Society in the Early Islamic State. London and New York: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-25093-5.
  • Streck, Maximilian (1987) [1927]. "AL-ʿAWĀṢIM". In Houtsma, Martijn Theodoor (ed.). E.J. Brill's First Encyclopaedia of Islam, 1913–1936, Volume I: A–Bābā Beg. Leiden: BRILL. pp. 515–516. ISBN 90-04-08265-4.
  • Toynbee, Arnold (1973). Constantine Porphyrogenitus and His World. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-215253-X.
  • Vasiliev, Alexander A. (1935). Byzance et les Arabes, Tome I: La dynastie d'Amorium (820–867). Corpus Bruxellense Historiae Byzantinae (in French). French ed.: Henri Grégoire, Marius Canard. Brussels: Éditions de l'Institut de philologie et d'histoire orientales. OCLC 181731396.
  • Wheatley, Paul (2000). The Places Where Men Pray Together: Cities in Islamic Lands, Seventh Through the Tenth Centuries. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-89428-7.
  • Whittow, Mark (1996). The Making of Byzantium, 600–1025. Berkeley and Los Angeles, California: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-20496-6.

Further reading edit

  • Bonner, Michael (1994). "The naming of the frontier: 'Awāṣim, Thughūr, and the Arab geographers". Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies. 57. Cambridge University Press: 17–24. doi:10.1017/S0041977X0002807X.
  • Bonner, Michael (1996). Aristocratic Violence and Holy War: Studies in the Jihad and the Arab–Byzantine Frontier. New Haven, Connecticut: American Oriental Society. ISBN 0-940490-11-0.
  • Haldon, John F.; Kennedy, Hugh (1980). "The Arab–Byzantine Frontier in the Eighth and Ninth Centuries: Military Organization and Society in the Borderlands". Recueil des Travaux de l'Institut d'Études Byzantines. 19. Belgrade: 79–116. ISBN 9780754659099.
  • Miotto, Marco (2015). "Ααουάσιμ και Θουγούρ: Το στρατιωτικό σύνορο του Χαλιφάτου στην Ανατολική Μικρά Ασία" (PDF). Vyzantiaka (in Greek). 32: 133–156. ISSN 1012-0513.
  • Nicolle, David; Adam Hook (2008-06-17). Saracen Strongholds AD 630–1050: The Middle East and Central Asia. Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84603-115-1.
  • Von Sivers, Peter (1982). "Taxes and Trade in the 'Abbāsid Thughūr, 750-962/133-351". Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient. 25 (1): 71–99. doi:10.1163/156852082X00085.

awasim, thughur, redirects, here, frontiers, islamic, spain, upper, march, central, march, lower, march, ʿawāṣim, arabic, العواصم, defences, fortifications, sing, ʿāṣimah, ـع, ـاص, ـم, ـة, protectress, arabic, term, used, refer, muslim, side, frontier, zone, b. al Thughur redirects here For the frontiers of Islamic Spain see Upper March Central March and Lower March Al ʿAwaṣim Arabic العواصم the defences fortifications sing al ʿaṣimah ا ل ـع ـاص ـم ـة protectress was the Arabic term used to refer to the Muslim side of the frontier zone between the Byzantine Empire and the Umayyad and Abbasid Caliphates in Cilicia northern Syria and Upper Mesopotamia 2 It was established in the early 8th century once the first wave of the Muslim conquests ebbed and lasted until the mid 10th century when it was overrun by the Byzantine advance It comprised the forward marches comprising a chain of fortified strongholds known as al thughur ا لـث ـغ ـو ر sing al thagr ا لـث ـغ ـر cleft opening and the rear or inner regions of the frontier zone which was known as al ʿawaṣim proper On the Byzantine side the Muslim marches were mirrored by the institution of the kleisourai districts and the akritai border guards Thughur and Awasimا لـث ـغ ـو ر و ال ـع ـو اص ـم al thughur wa l ʿawaṣimCilicia northern Syria and Upper MesopotamiaTypeFortified border zoneSite informationControlled byAbbasid Caliphate 750s c 930 Ikhshidids c 935 940s Hamdanids 940s 962s Mamluks of Egypt 14th century 1516 Site historyBuilt8th centuryBuilt byAbbasid Caliphate Mamluk Sultanate of EgyptIn usec 750s c 962s 14th century 1514Garrison informationGarrison25 000 in c 780 1 The term thughur was also used in the marches of al Andalus and Mawara al Nahr and survived in historical parlance to be revived by the Egyptian Mamluks in the 14th century when the areas traditionally comprising the ʿawaṣim and thughur in northern Syria and the northern Euphrates region came under their control 3 Contents 1 Arab Byzantine frontier zone 1 1 Creation of the frontier zone 1 2 Administrative organization and settlements 1 3 Military operations 2 Mamluk Turkmen frontier zone 3 See also 4 References 5 Sources 6 Further readingArab Byzantine frontier zone editCreation of the frontier zone edit Already from late 630s after the rapid Muslim conquest of Syria a wide zone unclaimed by either Byzantines or Arabs and virtually deserted known in Arabic as al Ḍawaḥi ا لـد و اح ي of the Outer Lands and in Greek as ta akra tὰ ἄkra the extremities emerged between the two powers in Cilicia along the southern approaches of the Taurus and Anti Taurus mountain ranges leaving the Anatolian plateau in Byzantine hands Both Emperor Heraclius r 610 641 and the Caliph ʿUmar r 634 644 pursued a strategy of destruction within this zone trying to transform it into an effective barrier between their realms 2 4 Nevertheless the ultimate aim of the caliphs remained the outright conquest of Byzantium as they had done with its provinces in Syria Egypt and North Africa and it was only the failure of the Second Arab Siege of Constantinople in 717 718 that forced a revision of this strategic objective although raids into Anatolia continued the goal of conquest was abandoned and the border between the two powers began to acquire more permanent features For the next two centuries border fortresses might change hands between Byzantines and Arabs but the basic outline of the Arab Byzantine border remained essentially unaltered 5 6 7 Thus the term al thughur which initially meant fissures clefts cf their Greek name ta Stomia tὰ Stomia the mouths openings and designated the actual borderlands came to mean boundaries employed in phrases like Thughur al Islam ث ـغ ـو ر ال إ س ـل ام Boundary of Islam or Thughur al Rumiya الث غ ور الر وم ي ة Boundary of the Rum 2 8 9 nbsp Map of the Byzantine Arab frontier zone in southeastern Asia Minor with the major fortresses This process was marked by a gradual consolidation of the previously deserted zone and its transformation into a settled and fortified borderland especially after the Byzantines abandoned Cilicia during the reign of Caliph Abd al Malik r 685 705 The Muslims began to move into the area reoccupying and repairing the abandoned towns and forts The process began under the Umayyads but intensified under the first Abbasids especially during the rule of Harun al Rashid r 786 809 2 7 Thus a line of forts was gradually established stretching from Tarsus Ar Ṭarsus on the Mediterranean coast to Malatya Ar Malaṭiya Gr Melitene and Kamacha Ar Ḥiṣn Kamkh on the upper course of the Euphrates 10 11 12 These were located at strategic choke points located at the intersections of major roads or at the mouths of important passes 13 Administrative organization and settlements edit The entire frontier zone was initially part of the jund one of the military administrative divisions into which Muslim Syria was divided of Homs After 680 it formed part of the new jund of Qinnasrin Gr Chalkis until Harun al Rashid established a separate jund al ʿAwaṣim ج ـن ـد ال ـع ـو اص ـم in 786 covering the entire region from the Byzantine border in the north and west to the Euphrates in the east and a line running south of Antioch Ar Anṭakiya Aleppo Ar Ḥalab Gr Berroia and Manbij Gr Hierapolis Manbij and later Antioch were the new province s capitals 2 13 14 The al ʿAwaṣim proper served as the second defensive line behind the Thughur stretching across northern Syria and comprising the towns of Baghras Bayas Duluk Gr Doliche or Telouch Alexandretta Ar Iskandariya Cyrrhus Ar Qurus Ra ban and Tizin 2 10 The Thughur the actual frontier zone was divided into the Cilician or Syrian al Thughur al Sha miya ا لـث ـغ ـو ر الـش ـأ م ـي ـة and the Jaziran or Mesopotamian al Thughur al Jaziriya ا لـث ـغ ـو ر ال ـج ـز ي ـر ي ـة sectors roughly separated by the Amanus mountains There was no overall governor or administrative centre for the Thughur although Tarsus and Malatya emerged as the most important towns in Cilicia and the Mesopotamian sector respectively The towns of the Thughur came variously under the administrative control of the jund al ʿAwaṣim or functioned as separate districts the situation is complicated by the fact that by the 10th century the terms Thughur and al ʿAwaṣim were often used interchangeably in the sources 2 15 16 In addition from the early 10th century with the Byzantine advance into Armenia the frontier around Diyar Bakr became a third sector al Thughur al Bakriya الـث ـغ ـو ر الـب ـك ـر ي ـة 17 In the Cilician sector Mopsuestia Ar al Maṣṣiṣa was the first city to be re occupied and garrisoned already under the Umayyads who settled 300 soldiers there in 703 a number raised under the first Abbasids to some 4 000 Adana followed in 758 760 and Tarsus in 787 8 Tarsus quickly became the largest settlement in the region and the Arabs most important base of operations against the Byzantines counting between 4 000 and 5 000 troops in its garrison Other important fortresses in Cilicia which however were little more than military outposts were Ayn Zarba Gr Anazarbus al Haruniya founded by Harun al Rashid Tall Gubair and al Kanisat al Sawda These were complemented by smaller forts dotted across the Cilician plain holding smaller garrisons of a dozen or so men 11 17 18 In the more mountainous terrain of the Mesopotamian frontier zone the main strongholds were located in the fertile parts of relatively isolated valleys controlling the entrances of passes over the mountains Mar ash Gr Germanikeia rebuilt already under Muawiyah I r 661 680 and again under Harun al Rashid al Ḥadath Gr Adata likewise refortified by the first Abbasid caliphs and provided with 4 000 troops and Malatya which had been colonized by the Umayyads destroyed by the Byzantines and rebuilt again and likewise garrisoned with 4 000 men in 757 8 Further fortresses of lesser importance in the Mesopotamian sector were Salaghus Kaisum Ḥiṣn Zibaṭra Gr Zapetra Sozopetra Sumaisaṭ Gr Samosata Ḥiṣn Qalawdhiya and Ḥiṣn Ziyad Some of the northern fortresses of the al ʿAwaṣim province like Duluk or Cyrrhus were also sometimes included in it Further north the relatively isolated fortress towns of Qaliqala Gr Theodosiopolis modern Erzurum and Kamacha formed the northernmost outposts of Muslim rule 17 18 19 The Thughur al Bakriya included according to Qudama ibn Ja far Sumaisaṭ Ḥani Malikyan Gamah Ḥauran and al Kilis 17 from all the great towns within the borders of Persia and Mesopotamia and Arabia Syria Egypt and Morocco there is no city but has in Tarsus a hostelry for its townsmen where the warriors for the Faith from each particular country live And when they have once reached Tarsus they settle there and remain to serve in the garrison among them prayer and worship are most diligently performed from all hands funds are sent to them and they receive alms rich and plentiful also there is hardly a sultan who does not send hither some auxiliary troops Ibn Hawqal s description of Tarsus as a centre for jihad against Byzantium 20 The caliphs repopulated the area by bringing in colonists and regular soldiers from Syria but also Persians Slavs Arab Christians and people from the eastern edges of the Muslim world settlers from Khurasan the Turkic Sayabija tribe or Jatts Ar Zuṭṭ from India 21 22 The regular troops stationed there were favoured with lower taxes the tithe or ʿushr instead of the kharaj land tax higher pay and small land grants qaṭa i In early Abbasid times these troops numbered some 25 000 half of them drawn from Khurasan and the rest from Syria and Upper Mesopotamia They were complemented by volunteers drawn by the religious motivation of jihad against the Byzantines but often paid a salary by the state as well 18 23 24 All this entailed a heavy financial burden on the Abbasid government Under Harun al Rashid taxation from the Cilician sector brought in 100 000 gold dinars every year which were all spent locally for public works salaries espionage etc In addition the costs of cross border expeditions typically ranged between 200 000 and 300 000 dinars annually The Mesopotamian sector s revenue amounted to some 70 000 dinars to which the central government added 120 000 170 000 dinars each year for the upkeep of the fortifications and the salary of the frontier troops 25 Military operations edit By the 9th century the Arab raiding expeditions launched against Byzantium from the frontier zone had gradually assumed an almost ritual character and were strictly organized According to Qudama ibn Ja far the conventional pattern of Arab incursions included a first expedition in spring 10 May 10 June when horses could find abundant fodder followed after about a month s rest by a summer raid 10 July 8 September usually the main campaign of the year and sometimes by a winter raid in February March 10 26 27 The importance of these raids is summarized by Islamic scholar Hugh N Kennedy the ṣaʿifa summer raid was as much a part of the symbolic and ritual functions of the Caliph as was organising and providing leadership for the annual hajj to Mecca 28 The frontier zone was fiercely contested between the Arabs and the Byzantines Raids and counter raids were a permanent fixture of this type of warfare Forts on either side of the notional frontier were captured and razed or sometimes occupied but never for long As a result the region was often depopulated necessitating repeated resettlement There is nevertheless evidence of some prosperity based on agriculture and commerce especially during the second half of the 9th century when the borderlands became a node in a commercial route linking Basra with northern Syria and even Constantinople 21 29 After 842 and for most of the later 9th century the decline of Abbasid power meant that control over the Thughur gradually devolved to semi independent border emirates chiefly Tarsus Malatya and Qaliqala which were left largely to fend on their own against a resurgent Byzantium The Battle of Lalakaon in 863 broke the power of Malatya altering the balance of power in the region and signalled the beginning of a gradual Byzantine encroachment on the Arab borderlands 30 31 32 With the onset of the Abbasid Caliphate s terminal period of crisis after 928 control of the Muslim frontier cities shifted to the Ikhshidid and Hamdanid dynasties In the 930s under the leadership of John Kourkouas the Byzantines broke through and conquered Malatya and most of the Mesopotamian sector of the Thughur Although the Hamdanid emir of Aleppo Sayf al Dawla r 946 967 managed to stem the Byzantine advance his success was only temporary in 964 965 Emperor Nikephoros II Phokas r 963 969 captured Cilicia followed soon after by Antioch while the Hamdanids of Aleppo became a tributary state 30 33 34 35 Mamluk Turkmen frontier zone editAfter their conquest of Syria in the late 13th century the Egyptian Mamluks re established the al thughur wa l ʿawaṣim as a defensive zone to shield Syria from the Turkoman states of Asia Minor and the Caucasus including at a later stage the Ottoman Empire Like the earlier model the thughur were divided into a Syrian and a Mesopotamian march as well as a rear zone along northern Syria The Mamluks entrusted the defence of the Syrian Cilician march to the client Turkmen principality of the Ramadanids while the Dulkadirid principality fulfilled the same role in the Mesopotamian thughur To safeguard their control of the frontier zone and to keep the two client beyliks separated and under control the Mamluks also retained garrisons in seven strategically important sites Tarsus Ayas Serfendikar Sis Darende Malatya and Divrigi 36 Ahmad al Qalqashandi gives the subdivisions niyabat of the Mamluk thughur as follows eight for the Syrian sector Malatya Divrigi Darende Elbistan Ayas Tarsus and Adana Serfendikar and Sis and three on the Euphrates sector al Bira Qal at Ja bar and al Ruha 3 37 See also editGhazi warriors ribaṭ and maḥras typical Muslim fortifications Digenes Akritas KarbeasReferences edit Kennedy 2001 pp 97 98 a b c d e f g Streck 1987 p 515 a b Honigmann 1987 p 739 Kaegi 1995 pp 236 244 Kaegi 1995 pp 246 247 Toynbee 1973 pp 108 109 a b Whittow 1996 p 212 El Cheikh 2004 p 84 Honigmann 1987 p 738 a b c El Cheikh 2004 p 83 a b Wheatley 2000 pp 260 261 Vasiliev 1935 pp 94 96 a b Kazhdan 1991 p 238 Wheatley 2000 p 116 Honigmann 1987 pp 738 739 Wheatley 2000 pp 116 260 a b c d Honigmann 1935 pp 42 43 a b c Kennedy 2001 pp 82 98 Wheatley 2000 p 261 Toynbee 1973 pp 114 115 a b Streck 1987 pp 515 516 Wheatley 2000 pp 116 117 261 Wheatley 2000 p 262 Toynbee 1973 p 113 Vasiliev 1935 pp 96 97 Toynbee 1973 p 115 Whittow 1996 pp 212 213 Kennedy 2001 p 106 Wheatley 2000 pp 116 117 262 263 a b Streck 1987 p 516 Toynbee 1973 pp 110 111 113 114 Whittow 1996 pp 310 311 Kazhdan 1991 p 1479 Wheatley 2000 pp 116 261 Whittow 1996 pp 317 318 326 329 Har El 1995 pp 43 47 Har El 1995 p 44Sources editCanard M 1960 al ʿAwaṣim In Gibb H A R Kramers J H Levi Provencal E Schacht J Lewis B amp Pellat Ch eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Volume I A B Leiden E J Brill pp 761 762 OCLC 495469456 El Cheikh Nadia Maria 2004 Byzantium Viewed by the Arabs Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard Center for Middle Eastern Studies ISBN 0 932885 30 6 Har El Shai 1995 Struggle for Domination in the Middle East The Ottoman Mamluk War 1485 91 BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 10180 7 Honigmann Ernst 1935 Byzance et les Arabes Tome III Die Ostgrenze des Byzantinischen Reiches von 363 bis 1071 nach griechischen arabischen syrischen und armenischen Quellen Corpus Bruxellense Historiae Byzantinae in German Brussels Editions de l Institut de philologie et d histoire orientales OCLC 6934222 Honigmann E 1987 1927 AL THUGHuR In Houtsma Martijn Theodoor ed E J Brill s First Encyclopaedia of Islam 1913 1936 Volume VIII Ṭa if Zurkhana Leiden BRILL pp 738 739 ISBN 90 04 08265 4 Kaegi Walter Emil 1995 Byzantium and the Early Islamic Conquests Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 48455 8 Kazhdan Alexander ed 1991 The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 504652 8 Kennedy Hugh 2001 The Armies of the Caliphs Military and Society in the Early Islamic State London and New York Routledge ISBN 0 415 25093 5 Streck Maximilian 1987 1927 AL ʿAWAṢIM In Houtsma Martijn Theodoor ed E J Brill s First Encyclopaedia of Islam 1913 1936 Volume I A Baba Beg Leiden BRILL pp 515 516 ISBN 90 04 08265 4 Toynbee Arnold 1973 Constantine Porphyrogenitus and His World Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 215253 X Vasiliev Alexander A 1935 Byzance et les Arabes Tome I La dynastie d Amorium 820 867 Corpus Bruxellense Historiae Byzantinae in French French ed Henri Gregoire Marius Canard Brussels Editions de l Institut de philologie et d histoire orientales OCLC 181731396 Wheatley Paul 2000 The Places Where Men Pray Together Cities in Islamic Lands Seventh Through the Tenth Centuries University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 89428 7 Whittow Mark 1996 The Making of Byzantium 600 1025 Berkeley and Los Angeles California University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 20496 6 Further reading editBonner Michael 1994 The naming of the frontier Awaṣim Thughur and the Arab geographers Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 57 Cambridge University Press 17 24 doi 10 1017 S0041977X0002807X Bonner Michael 1996 Aristocratic Violence and Holy War Studies in the Jihad and the Arab Byzantine Frontier New Haven Connecticut American Oriental Society ISBN 0 940490 11 0 Haldon John F Kennedy Hugh 1980 The Arab Byzantine Frontier in the Eighth and Ninth Centuries Military Organization and Society in the Borderlands Recueil des Travaux de l Institut d Etudes Byzantines 19 Belgrade 79 116 ISBN 9780754659099 Miotto Marco 2015 Aaoyasim kai 8oygoyr To stratiwtiko synoro toy Xalifatoy sthn Anatolikh Mikra Asia PDF Vyzantiaka in Greek 32 133 156 ISSN 1012 0513 Nicolle David Adam Hook 2008 06 17 Saracen Strongholds AD 630 1050 The Middle East and Central Asia Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84603 115 1 Von Sivers Peter 1982 Taxes and Trade in the Abbasid Thughur 750 962 133 351 Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient 25 1 71 99 doi 10 1163 156852082X00085 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Al Awasim amp oldid 1223387977, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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