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Fatimid dynasty

The Fatimid dynasty (Arabic: الفاطميون) was an Isma'ili Shi'a dynasty of Arab descent[1] that ruled an extensive empire, the Fatimid Caliphate, between 909 and 1171 CE. Claiming descent from Fatima and Ali, they also held the Isma'ili imamate, claiming to be the rightful leaders of the Muslim community. The line of Nizari Isma'ili imams, represented today by the Aga Khans, claims descent from a branch of the Fatimids. The Alavi Bohras, predominantly based in Vadodara (Baroda) also descend from the branch of the Fatimids.

Fatimid dynasty
الفاطميون
Parent familyBanu Ali
CountryFatimid Caliphate
EtymologyFatima
Place of originMecca, Arabia
Founded909
FounderAbd Allah al-Mahdi Billah
Final rulerAl-Adid li-Din Allah
Historic seatRaqqada (909–921)
al-Mahdiya (921–948)
al-Mansuriya (948–973)
Cairo (973–1171)
TitlesImam and Caliph
Dissolution1171

The Fatimid dynasty emerged as the leaders of the clandestine early Isma'ili missionary movement (da'wa) in the ninth century CE, ostensibly acting on behalf of a hidden imam, implied at the time to be Muhammad ibn Isma'il. The Isma'ili da'wa spread widely across the Islamic world, then ruled by the Abbasid Caliphate. In 899, the future first Fatimid caliph, Abdallah, proclaimed himself to be the expected imam, causing a rift in the Isma'ili da'wa as the Qarmatians, who did not recognize his imamate, split off. In the meantime, Isma'ili agents had managed to conquer large parts of Yemen and Ifriqiya, as well as launch uprisings in Syria and Iraq. Fleeing Abbasid persecution to Ifriqiya, Abdallah proclaimed himself openly and established the Fatimid Caliphate in 909. From there, the Fatimid imam–caliphs extended their rule over most of the Maghreb as well as Sicily, before conquering Egypt in 969. Founding Cairo as their new capital, for the next two centuries, the Fatimids would be based in Egypt and identified with the country. At their height, the Fatimids claimed control or suzerainty over much of North Africa, Sicily, Egypt, the Levant, the Hejaz, Yemen, and Multan.

The Fatimids' claimed pedigree of descent from Fatima and Ali was central to their legitimacy as the legitimate imams in an unbroken, divinely ordained line from Ali onwards. Their initial obscurity, and the publication of conflicting and incorrect genealogies by the first Fatimid caliph, Abdallah al-Mahdi Billah (known by the diminutive Ubayd Allah by his detractors), cast doubt on the accuracy of these claims, which were usually rejected by contemporary Sunni and Twelver Shi'a alike, who considered them impostors and usurpers. As a result, many sources into the 20th century referred to the Fatimids by the derogatory name Ubaydids.

Fatimid expansion into the Levant, and the ideological challenge that the ascendancy of Shi'a regimes represented, resulted in the Sunnis rallying around the Abbasid Caliphate in response, triggering the Sunni revival of the 11th century. Faced with internal turmoil, and the arrival of the Seljuk Turks and then the Crusades, Fatimid power began to decline in the later 11th century. the dynasty was saved by passing power to powerful military viziers, but this also meant that the imam–caliphs often were mere puppet rulers. The initial dynamism of the da'wa was diminished by bitter succession disputes, which resulted in large parts of the Isma'ili community, such as the Druze, Nizaris, and Tayyibis, breaking off from the Fatimid allegiance, and tarnished the prestige and authority of the dynasty. The last of the Fatimid imam–caliphs were powerless child rulers that were pawns in the hands of their viziers. The last of these viziers, Saladin, deposed the dynasty in 1171, after the death of Caliph al-Adid. The remaining members of the dynasty and their offspring were placed under house arrest in Cairo until their deaths; the last members of the dynasty died in the mid-13th century.

Origin

Background: early Shi'ism

Since the death of Caliph Ali ibn Abi Talib in 661 AD, which led to the establishment of the Umayyad Caliphate, a part of the Muslim community rejected the Umayyads as usurpers and called for the establishment of a regime led by a member of the Ahl al-Bayt, the Family of Muhammad. The Abbasids, who claimed descent from Muhammad's paternal uncle Abbas ibn Abd al-Muttalib and thus claimed membership of the wider Family, profited from this during their rise to power against the Umayyads; but their claim was rejected by the Shi'a, who insisted on the exclusive right of the descendants of Hasan (d. 670) and Husayn (d. 680), Ali's sons by Muhammad's daughter Fatima.[2] A line of imams emerged from the offspring of Husayn, who did not openly lay claim to the caliphate, but were considered by their followers as the true representatives of God on earth.[2] This doctrine was founded on the designation (nass) of Ali by Muhammad at Ghadir Khumm, and later pro-Fatimid scholars held that an unbroken chain of designated imams would follow until the end of the world; indeed, these scholars argued that the imams' existence was an inevitable necessity.[3]

The sixth of these imams, Ja'far al-Sadiq, appointed (nass) his son Isma'il ibn Ja'far as his successor, but Isma'il died before his father, and when al-Sadiq himself died in 765, the succession was left open. One faction of al-Sadiq's followers held that he had designated another son, Musa al-Kadhim, as his heir. Others followed other sons, Muhammad al-Dibaj and Abdallah al-Aftah—as the latter died soon after, his followers went over to Musa's camp—or even refused to believe that al-Sadiq had died, and expected his return as a messiah.[4] Musa's adherents, who constituted the majority of al-Sadiq's followers, followed his line down to a twelfth imam who supposedly vanished in 874. Adherents of this line are known as the Twelvers.[2][5] Another branch believed that Ja'far al-Sadiq was followed by a seventh imam, who also had gone into hiding; hence this party is known as the Seveners. The exact identity of that seventh imam was disputed, but by the late ninth century had commonly been identified with Muhammad, son of Isma'il and grandson of al-Sadiq. From Muhammad's father, Isma'il, the sect receives its name of 'Isma'ili'.[2][6][7] Neither Isma'il's nor Muhammad's lives are well known, and after Muhammad's reported death during the reign of Harun al-Rashid (r. 786–809), the history of the early Isma'ili movement becomes obscure.[8]

Fatimid genealogies and controversies

Official Fatimid doctrine claimed an uninterrupted line of succession between the first Fatimid caliph, Abdallah al-Mahdi Billah (r. 909–934), and Ali and Fatima, via Muhammad ibn Isma'il.[9] This descent was both accepted and challenged already in the Middle Ages, and remains a topic of debate among scholars today.[10] As the historian of Shi'a Islam Heinz Halm comments, "The alleged descent of the dynasty from Ali ibn Abi Talib and Muhammad's daughter Fatima has been called into question by contemporaries from the very beginning and cannot be proven",[11] while Michael Brett, an expert on the Fatimids, asserts that "a factual answer to the question of their identity is impossible".[12]

The main problem arises with the succession linking al-Mahdi with Ja'far al-Sadiq. According to Isma'ili doctrine, the imams that followed Muhammad ibn Isma'il were in concealment (satr), but early Isma'ili sources do not mention them, and even later, official Isma'ili genealogies diverge on the number, names and identities of these 'hidden imams' (al-a'imma al-masturin), a problem complicated by the Isma'ili claims that the hidden imams assumed various aliases for safety.[13][14] Thus the pro-Isma'ili Prince Peter Hagop Mamour, in his 1934 apologetic work Polemics on the Origin of the Fatimi Caliphs, lists no fewer than fifty variations of the line of the four hidden imams between Isma'il ibn Ja'far and al-Mahdi, claiming that the various names represent pseudonyms.[15] Early Isma'ili sources tend to be silent on the matter, from a mixture of both religious imperative—since God has decreed his imams to be hidden, they should remain so—and apparent ignorance.[16] Al-Mahdi himself, in a letter sent to the Isma'ili community in Yemen, even claimed not to be descended from Isma'il ibn Ja'far, but from his older brother Abdallah al-Aftah, who is generally held to not have had any descendants at all. Notably, later official Fatimid genealogies rejected this version.[17][18][19] In addition, it appears that the first known ancestor of the Fatimid line, Abdallah al-Akbar, the great-grandfather of the first Fatimid caliph, initially claimed descent not from Ali at all, but from his brother Aqil ibn Abi Talib, and was accepted as such by the Aqilids of Basra.[20] According to Brett, the line of descent claimed by the Fatimid between Ja'far al-Sadiq and al-Mahdi reflects "historical beliefs rather than historical figures, for which there is little or no independent confirmation",[12] as even Isma'il ibn Ja'far is an obscure figure, let alone his supposed hidden successors.[21]

While pro-Fatimid sources emphasize their Alid descent—the dynasty named itself simply as the 'Alid dynasty' (al-dawla al-alawiyya)—many Sunni sources instead refer to them as the 'Ubaydids' (Arabic: بنو عبيد, romanizedBanu Ubayd), after the diminutive form Ubayd Allah for al-Mahdi's name, commonly used in Sunni sources with an apparently pejorative intent.[22][11] Medieval anti-Fatimid polemicists, starting with Ibn Rizam and Akhu Muhsin, were keen to discredit Isma'ilism as an antinomian heresy and generally considered Fatimid claims to Alid descent fraudulent. Instead, they put forth a counter claim that al-Mahdi descended from Abdallah, the son of a certain Maymun al-Qaddah from Khuzistan,[23] that al-Mahdi's real name was Sa'id, or that al-Mahdi's father was in reality a Jew (a common antisemitic trope among medieval Arab authors).[9] While several medieval Sunni authors and contemporary potentates—including the impeccably Alid sharifs of Mecca and Medina—accepted or appeared to accept Fatimid claims at face value,[24] this anti-Isma'ili 'black legend', as the modern scholar Farhad Daftary calls it, influenced Sunni historiographers throughout the following centuries, and became official doctrine with the Baghdad Manifesto of 1011.[25] Due to the paucity of actual Isma'ili material until Isma'ili sources started to become available and undergo scholarly examination during the 20th century, the Sunni version was adopted even by some early modern Orientalists.[26]

Early Isma'ili sources ignore the existence of Maymun al-Qaddah, but later, Fatimid-era sources were forced to confront their opponents' claims about his person, and tried to reconcile the conflicting genealogies accordingly.[17][27] Some sectarian Isma'ili—especially Druze—sources even claimed that during the period of concealment of the Isma'ili imams, the Isma'ili movement was actually led by the descendants of Maymun al-Qaddah, until the restoration of the true line with the Fatimid caliphs.[27] Later Tayyibi Isma'ili authors also used the figures of Maymun al-Qaddah and his son Abdallah to argue for the legality of there being a substitute or representative of the imam, whenever the latter was underage.[28] A further controversy that emerged already in medieval times is whether the second Fatimid caliph, Muhammad al-Qa'im bi-Amr Allah, was the son of al-Mahdi, or whether the latter was merely usurping the position of a still-hidden imam; that would mean that al-Qa'im was the first true Fatimid imam-caliph.[17][27]

Modern authors have tried to reconcile the genealogies. The Arabist Bernard Lewis suggested the existence of two parallel series of imams: trustee (mustawda') imams, descended from Maymun al-Qaddah, whose task was to hide and protect the existence of the real (mustakarr, lit.'permanent') imams. Lewis posited that al-Mahdi was the last of that line, and that al-Qa'im was the first of the mustakarr imams to sit on the throne.[17][29] Research by Vladimir Ivanov, on the other hand, has conclusively shown that the supposed Qaddahite descent of the Fatimids is a legend, likely invented by Ibn Rizam himself: the historical Maymun al-Qaddah is now known to have been a disciple of Muhammad al-Baqir (recognized by both Isma'ilis and Twelvers as an imam), and both he and his son Abdallah hailed from the Hejaz. For reasons of chronology alone, Ibn Rizam's version is thus proven to be untenable.[30] Access to more sources has furthermore led to the partial reconciliation of the conflicting accounts by positing that some of the variant names in the genealogies were indeed cover names for the Isma'ili imams: thus Maymun ('the Fortunate One') is suggested as the sobriquet for Muhammad ibn Isma'il, especially since a source connects him with a sect known as the Maymuniyya. This explanation is also present in an epistle by the fourth Fatimid caliph, al-Mu'izz, in 965. This would make the claim of al-Mahdi's descent from an 'Abdallah ibn Maymun' actually correct, and lead hostile sources to confuse him with the earlier Shi'a figure.[31] Another suggestion, by Abbas Hamdani and F. de Blois, is that the officially published genealogies represent a compromise between two different lines of descent from Ja'far al-Sadiq, one from Isma'il and another (per al-Mahdi's letter to the Yemenis) from Abdallah al-Aftah.[32][29] Other scholars, such as Halm, remain skeptical, while Omert Schrier and Michael Brett dismiss the Fatimid claims of Alid descent entirely as a pious fiction.[33]

The Fatimids and the early Isma'ili da'wa

Both the Twelvers and the Seveners held that their final imams were not dead, but had simply gone into concealment, and that they would soon return as a messiah, the mahdi ('the Rightly Guided One') or qa'im ('He Who Arises'), to usher in the end times.[2][34] The mahdi would rapidly overthrow the usurping Abbasids and destroy their capital Baghdad, restore the unity of the Muslims, conquer Constantinople, ensure the final triumph of Islam and establish a reign of peace and justice.[35] The Isma'ilis in particular believed that the mahdi would reveal the true, 'inner' (batin) meaning of religion, which was until then reserved for a few select initiates. The mahdi would abolish the 'outer' (zahir) forms and strictures of Islam, since henceforth the true religion, the religion of Adam, would be manifested without the need for symbols and other mediating devices.[36]

While the mahdi Muhammad ibn Isma'il remained hidden, however, he would need to be represented by agents, who would gather the faithful, spread the word (da'wa, 'invitation, calling'), and prepare his return. The head of this secret network was the living proof of the imam's existence, the hujja (lit.'seal').[37] The first known hujja was Abdallah al-Akbar, a wealthy merchant from Askar Mukram, in what is now southwestern Iran. Apart from improbable stories circulated by later anti-Isma'ili polemicists, his exact origin is unknown.[38] His teachings led to his being forced to flee his native city to escape persecution by the Abbasid authorities, and seek refuge in Basra. Once again, his teachings attracted the attention of the authorities, and he moved on to the small town of Salamiyah on the western edge of the Syrian Desert.[39] There he settled as a merchant from Basra, and had two sons, Ahmad and Ibrahim. When Abdallah died c. 827/8, Ahmad succeeded his father as the head of the Isma'ili movement, and was in turn succeeded by his younger son, Muhammad, known as Abu'l-Shalaghlagh.[40] In later Fatimid doctrine, Abdallah al-Akbar was presented as the eldest son of Muhammad ibn Isma'il, and his successor as imam, followed by Ahmad.[41] While Muhammad Abu'l-Shalaghlagh was the head of the da'wa, however, the imamate passed to another son, al-Husayn (d. 881/2), and thence to al-Husayn's son, Abdallah or Sa'id, the future Caliph al-Mahdi, who was born in 873/4.[42] Isma'ili texts suggest that Abu'l-Shalaghlagh was the guardian and tutor of al-Mahdi, but also that he tried to usurp the succession for his own sons but failed, as the latter all died prematurely.[42]

During the late ninth century, millennialist expectations increased in the Muslim world, coinciding with a deep crisis of the Abbasid Caliphate during the decade-long Anarchy at Samarra, the rise of breakaway and autonomous regimes in the provinces, and the large-scale Zanj Rebellion, whose leader claimed Alid descent and proclaimed himself as the mahdi.[43] In this chaotic atmosphere, and with the Abbasids preoccupied with suppressing the Zanj uprising, the Isma'ili da'wa spread rapidly, aided by dissatisfaction among Twelver adherents with the political quietism of their leadership and the recent disappearance of their twelfth imam.[44] Missionaries (da'is) like Hamdan Qarmat and his brother-in-law Abu Muhammad Abdan spread the network of agents to the area round Kufa in the late 870s, and from there to Yemen (Ibn Hawshab, 882) and thence India (884), Bahrayn (Abu Sa'id al-Jannabi, 899), Persia, and Ifriqiya (Abu Abdallah al-Shi'i, 893).[45][46] The real leadership of the movement remained hidden at Salamiyah, and only the chief da'is of each region, such as Hamdan Qarmat, knew and corresponded with it.[47] The true head of the movement remained hidden even from the senior missionaries, however, and a certain Fayruz functioned as chief missionary (da'i al-du'at) and 'gateway' (bab) to the hidden leader.[48]

Qarmatian schism and flight to the Maghreb

In about 899, Abdallah ibn al-Husayn assumed the leadership of the da'wa. Soon, he began making alterations to the doctrine, which worried Hamdan Qarmat. Abdan went to Salamiyah to investigate the matter, and learned that Abdallah claimed that the expected mahdi was not Muhammad ibn Isma'il, as commonly propagated, but Abdallah himself, and that Abdallah's ancestors, far from being simply the hujjas of the imams, were actually the imams themselves. In a letter to the Yemeni community, Abdallah claimed that 'Muhammad ibn Isma'il' was actually a cover name assumed by each incumbent imam, and denied any particular role of Muhammad ibn Isma'il as the expected mahdi who was to usher in the end times.[49] These doctrinal innovations caused a major rift in the movement, as Hamdan denounced the leadership in Salamiyah, gathered the Iraqi da'is and ordered them to cease the missionary effort. Shortly after this Hamdan "disappeared" from his headquarters, and Abdan was assassinated by Zakarawayh ibn Mihrawayh, who had remained loyal to Salamiyah.[50]

The schism left the early Isma'ili da'wa divided into two factions: those who accepted Abdallah's claims, and continued to follow him, and became the Isma'ilis proper, and those who rejected them and continued to believe in the return of Muhammad ibn Isma'il as mahdi, who became known as the Qarmatians (although anti-Fatimid sources also used the label for the Fatimids themselves).[51] In Iraq and Persia, the community was split between the two factions, but in Bahrayn, the local da'is split off from Salamiyah and established an independent Qarmatian state that lasted into the 1070s.[51] On the other hand, Zakarawayh and his loyalists now began a series of anti-Abbasid uprisings in Iraq and Syria in 902–907, with the support of the Bedouin tribes. Calling themselves the Fatimiyyun, the uprisings enjoyed some ephemeral success, but were eventually suppressed by the still potent Abbasid army. Zakarawayh apparently moved without Abdallah's authorization or prior knowledge, and thus placed him in danger: the Abbasid authorities began a crackdown on the da'wa, and Zakarawayh's sons unwittingly revealed the location and identity of Abdallah to the Abbasids, who launched a man-hunt against him.[52] Already in 902, Abdallah with his household left Salamiyah for Ramla. As the revolts instigated by Zakarawayh were suppressed, Abdallah moved to Tulunid Egypt in early 904. As the Abbasids recovered control of Egypt in the next year, the small party fled again. While his companions expected to head to Yemen, where the Isma'ili da'wa had enjoyed great success, Abdallah turned westward, and established himself at the oasis town of Sijilmasa, in what is now southwestern Morocco, in August 905.[22][53]

Ruling an empire

Establishment of the Fatimid Caliphate

In the meantime, in Ifriqiya, the da'i Abu Abdallah al-Shi'i had managed to convert the Berber tribe of the Kutama to the Isma'ili cause. From 902 on, the Kutama had gradually conquered the region from its Abbasid clients, the Aghlabids. On 25 March 909, Abu Abdallah and his Kutama entered the Aghlabid palace city of Raqqada in triumph.[11][54] The da'i proclaimed a Shi'a regime, but kept the name of his master secret as yet, only using the title hujjat Allah, 'God's proof'; and soon set out westward, at the head of a large army, to bring his imam to Ifriqiya.[11][55] The Kutama army destroyed the Kharijite Rustamid emirate on its way, and arrived at Sijilmasa in August 909. There Abdallah was acclaimed caliph by the troops.[56] On 4 January 910, Abdallah entered Raqqada, where he publicly proclaimed himself caliph with the regnal title of al-imam al-mahdi bi'llah, 'the imam rightly guided by God'.[57]

The first crisis of the new regime occurred quickly. Abu Abdallah al-Shi'i and his brother demanded proof of Abdallah being the mahdi, or resented the limitations on their authority placed by the new ruler. Al-Mahdi Billah was able to eliminate them in 911, but this led to a Kutama revolt, led by a child mahdi as a figurehead. The uprising was defeated, and the Fatimid control over the Kutama consolidated.[22][58] Nevertheless, Fatimid power remained fragile, as it was based almost exclusively on the—often truculent—Kutama, and later the Sanhaja tribe as well.[11] Conversely, the local Arabs of Ifriqiya were Maliki Sunnis, while most Berber tribes further west—notably the Zenata confederation—adhered to various forms of Kharijism, and thus opposed to the Isma'ili regime of the Fatimids.[22][59]

Imperial expansion

Given the semi-divine status they claimed as the rightful imams of Islam, the Fatimids' ambitions were not limited to Ifriqiya. The Fatimid caliphs aimed to overthrow not only the rival Muslim monarchs—the Abbasids of Baghdad and the Umayyads of Cordoba—but also the Byzantine Empire, claiming a divine right to universal sovereignty.[60]

Fatimid power quickly expanded across the sea to Sicily, which had been conquered by the Aghlabids from the Byzantines,[11] but Fatimid rule was established there only after a series of revolts by the local Muslims, who at times declared for the Abbasids, were suppressed.[61][62] Sicily was also important as a battleground against the Byzantines, which among other things allowed the Fatimids to present themselves as champions of Islam, engaged in holy war against the infidels. In practice, relations were often more pragmatic, and warfare alternated with periods of truce.[61][63] From 948 on, a series of hereditary governors, the Kalbid dynasty, governed Sicily on the Fatimids' behalf.[61]

The Fatimids also expanded west to the rest of the Maghreb, where Fez and Sijilmasa were captured in 920–921, although these conquests were difficult to hold, and brought the Fatimids into conflict with the Umayyads of Cordoba.[64][65] In an attempt to supplant the Abbasids, al-Mahdi's son and heir, al-Qa'im bi-Amr Allah, led campaigns eastward to capture Egypt in 914 and 919. Both endeavours failed, leaving only the Cyrenaica in Fatimid hands.[11][65]

Revolt of Abu Yazid

 
The fortified entrance to al-Mahdiyya today

Between 916 and 921, al-Mahdi built a new residence, the fortified palace city of Mahdiyya, on a rocky promontory on the Ifriqiyan coast.[11] When Al-Mahdi died in 934, he was succeeded by his son, al-Qa'im (r. 934–946), who continued his father's policies.[66] Another attempted invasion of Egypt in 935 was defeated by the country's new strongman ruler, Muhammad ibn Tughj al-Ikhshid.[67]

The most notable event of al-Qa'im's reign was the revolt of the Zenata Berbers under the Khariji preacher Abu Yazid in 943/44: almost all of Ifriqiya succumbed to the rebels, and in January 945, the rebels laid siege to Mahdiyya itself.[11][68] Al-Qa'im died during the siege, and was succeeded by his son, Abu Tahir Isma'il (r. 946–953). The new caliph concealed his father's death, took to the field, and in a series of battles defeated the rebel armies and captured Abu Yazid in August 947.[11][69] The victory over the rebel leader, who had almost destroyed the Fatimid state and was symbolically called the Dajjal ('the false Messiah') by the Isma'ili da'wa, was the moment when Abu Tahir declared himself as the imam and caliph in succession to his father, with the name of al-Mansur bi-Nasr Allah ('The Victor with the Help of God').[11][70] Al-Mansur moved the Fatimid court to a new palace city, al-Mansuriyya near Kairouan, but died soon after, and was succeeded by his son, al-Mu'izz li-Din Allah (r. 953–975).[11]

Conquest of Egypt and move of the capital to Cairo

Al-Mu'izz was an excellent planner and organizer, and the state he inherited had regained internal stability, after the turmoils of Abu Yazid's revolt.[71] His early reign saw successes against the Byzantines, where the last remaining Byzantine strongholds were extinguished with the Fall of Rometta in 965,[72] as well as the reconquest of the western Maghreb by the Fatimid general Jawhar in 958–960, temporarily expelling Umayyad influence from the region and extending Fatimid rule to the shores of the Atlantic Ocean.[73]

After these successes, al-Mu'izz once again turned to the abandoned project of the conquest of Egypt. Meticulous military and political preparations were undertaken, and the agents of the Isma'ili da'wa engaged to promote the Fatimid cause in Egypt and suborn officials of the weakened Ikhshidid regime.[61][74] As a result, when the Fatimid army under Jawhar arrived in Egypt in summer 969, it faced little organized resistance. Jawhar entered the Egyptian capital, Fustat, in July 969, and claimed the country for his master.[75] Immediately he began establishing a new capital city near Fustat, which came to be known as al-Qahira al-Mu'izziyya ('the Victorious One of al-Mu'izz'), modern Cairo.[11]

Jawhar governed Egypt for the next four years as viceroy of al-Mu'izz, restoring the country's finances.[76] It was not until August 972 that al-Mu'izz left Ifriqiya, appointing the Berber Buluggin ibn Ziri as his viceroy there. In June 973, the Fatimid court arrived in Egypt and al-Mu'izz took up residence in Cairo.[77]

Expansion into Syria

In the meantime, immediately after the conquest if Egypt Jawhar had tried to extend Fatimid rule into Syria. The first Fatimid invasion failed largely due to the opposition of the Qarmatians of Bahrayn, who did not hesitate to align themselves with the Abbasid caliph and denounce al-Mu'izz in public. The Qarmatian leader al-Hasan al-A'sam led two invasions of Egypt in 971 and again, despite al-Mu'izz's efforts to win him over, in 974. Both invasions were beaten back at the gates of Cairo, forcing the Qarmatians to retreat to Bahrayn, and opening the path for a renewed Fatimid attempt to conquer Syria.[78] At the same time, around 970/71, the two holy cities of Mecca and Medina, recognized Fatimid suzerainty, an important symbolic victory for the Fatimids.[79]

In 978, Caliph al-Aziz (r. 975–996) captured Damascus, but Fatimid power in Syria continued to be challenged, whether by powerful generals or by the restive Bedouin of Palestine under the Jarrahids.[79] Al-Aziz's attempts to capture the Hamdanid emirate of Aleppo brought the Fatimids into conflict with the Byzantines, who considered the city their protectorate.[80] Attempts to take Aleppo failed in 983, 992/3 and 994/5,[79] and effective Fatimid power reached little past Tripoli in the north.[79] In 987, the Fatimid suzerainty was recognized by the Ya'furids in Yemen,[79] but Fatimid attempts to induce the fellow Shi'a rulers of Iraq, the Buyids, to recognize their suzerainty, failed; the Buyids rejected the Fatimids' claims of Alid descent.[81] Al-Aziz's reign saw also a transformation in the structure and nature of the Fatimid state: the Kutama, who had been the main pillar of the early Fatimid regime, were now complemented by Turkish military slaves (ghilman) as well as Black African slave soldiers, while under the guidance of Ya'qub ibn Killis, the Fatimid administration became organized and regularized.[11]

Reign of al-Hakim

Al-Aziz died in 996, while preparing a major campaign against the Byzantines and Hamdanids. He was succeeded by his eleven-year-old son, al-Hakim (r. 996–1021).[11] Initially under the tutelage of powerful officials, al-Hakim managed to seize the reins of power for himself in 1000.[11] The early years of his reign saw the conclusion of peace with Byzantium in 1001,[80] as well as the great tribal revolts of Abu Rukwa in Cyrenaica in 1005, and of Mufarrij ibn Daghfal in Palestine in 1012–13.[11] In the north, the Uqaylids of Mosul briefly acknowledged Fatimid suzerainty in 1010, and in 1015, Aleppo did the same, with Fatimid troops entering the city and imposing direct control in 1017.[79] Relations with the Zirids, who quickly had begun distancing themselves from Cairo's authority, became more strained under al-Hakim due to disputes over Cyrenaica and Tripoli,[80] and in 1016/7, the new Zirid emir, al-Mu'izz ibn Badis, launched a pogrom against the remaining Isma'ilis in Ifriqiya.[11]

From 1015 on, the Fatimid Caliphate, and the Isma'ili community, were confronted by a rise in sectarianism: a series of preachers who propagated extremist versions of Isma'ilism appeared, preaching the imminence of the end times, the divinity of al-Hakim, and the abolition of the Sharia. The Fatimid religious establishment opposed such antinomian views, but al-Hakim seems to have tolerated, if not encouraged them. Although al-Hakim never officially espoused their views, the teachings of men such as al-Darzi and Hamza ibn Ali resulted in the birth of the Druze faith.[11] At the same time, al-Hakim made curious innovations in the succession, by splitting up his office in two: one to succeed the caliphate, i.e. the secular office, and one to succeed as imam, i.e. as leader of the Isma'ili community. Furthermore, he sidelined his own son and appointed two cousins to the posts, thereby arousing the hostility of the Fatimid elites. As a result of a conspiracy among the latter, al-Hakim was murdered during one of his night rides outside Cairo, and his corpse disposed of, never to be found.[11]

The dynasty in power

During its rule over Egypt, the members of the dynasty enjoyed immense riches, founded on the possession of properties in the capital, Cairo, and its environs, as well as commerce.[82] The caliph himself was not above such enrichment, and owned extensive parts of Cairo; according to the mid-11th traveller Nasir Khusraw, all 20,000 shops in the city, as well as its caravanserais and baths, and 8,000 other buildings that paid a monthly rent to the caliph's private purse (diwan al-khass) or the private treasury (khizana al-khass).[83] Fatimid princesses are likewise recorded as being extremely wealthy, in part from estates allocated to them, and in part due to their own commercial and entrepreneurial activities. Thus at their death in 1050/51, two daughters of Caliph al-Mu'izz left estates of about 1.7 million gold dinars each, while Sitt al-Mulk is known to have employed an extensive staff of able administrators of both sexes for her far-flung economic interests.[84]

Family trees

Descent from Ali as accepted by the later Isma'ilis

Prophet Muhammad
Ali ibn Abi Talib
(asas)
Fatima
al-Hasan ibn Ali
(1st imam)
al-Husayn ibn Ali
(2nd imam)
Ali ibn Husayn Zayn al-Abidin
(3rd imam)
Zayd ibn AliMuhammad al-Baqir
(4th imam)
Zaydi imamsJa'far al-Sadiq
(5th imam)
Abdallah al-AftahMusa al-KadhimIsma'il ibn Ja'far
(6th imam)
Fathite imamsTwelver imamsMuhammad ibn Isma'il
(7th imam)
Abdallah
(8th imam, in concealment)
Ahmad
(9th imam, in concealment)
Abu Ali Muhammad
(Abu'l-Shalaghlagh)
al-Husayn
(10th imam, in concealment)
DaughterAbdallah
al-Mahdi bi'llah

(11th imam, 1st Fatimid caliph)
Muhammad
al-Qa'im bi-Amr Allah

(12th imam, 2nd Fatimid caliph)
   denotes imams as recognized by the Isma'ilis, regnal names in bold
Source: Daftary, Farhad (2007). The Ismāʿı̄lı̄s: Their History and Doctrines (Second ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 507. ISBN 978-0-521-61636-2.

Genealogy according to al-Mahdi's letter to the Yemeni community

In a letter sent to the Isma'ili community in Yemen by al-Mahdi Billah, which was reproduced by Ja'far ibn Mansur al-Yaman, the following genealogy is given:[85][86]

   denotes imams, regnal names in bold

Genealogy according to Bernard Lewis, Hamdani, de Blois and the letter of ʿAbd Allāh al-Mahdi Billah

According to Bernard Lewis there were two lines of Mustawda‘ – Qaddāḥid Trustee Imāms and Mustaqarr – Alid Imāms; Hamdani and de Blois constructed two parallel lines of descendants of Jāʿfar al-Sādiq.[87]: 115  Maymūn al-Qaddāḥ was the chief da'i and the guardian of Muḥammad ibn Ismā‘il and ʿAbd Allāh ibn Maymūn al-Qaddāḥ[88] who succeeded his father as the chief da'i in trust and bequeathed it to his own descendants and to ʿAbdullah al-Mahdi bi'l-Lāh. These were Mustawda‘ or Qaddāḥid Trustee Imāms. There was a second line of Hidden or Mustaqarr Alid Imāms starting with Muḥammad ibn Ismā‘il and ending with the second Fatimid caliph Al-Qa'im Bi-Amrillah.[87]

The genealogy of the Fatimid caliphs according to Bernard Lewis, Hamdani, de Blois, and ʿAbdullāh al-Mahdi bi'l-Lāh

References

  1. ^ Ilahiane, Hsain (2004). Ethnicities, Community Making, and Agrarian Change: The Political Ecology of a Moroccan Oasis. University Press of America. p. 43. ISBN 978-0-7618-2876-1.
  2. ^ a b c d e Brett 2017, p. 18.
  3. ^ Brett 2001, p. 31.
  4. ^ Daftary 2007, pp. 88–89.
  5. ^ Daftary 2007, p. 89.
  6. ^ Halm 1991, pp. 27–28.
  7. ^ Daftary 2007, pp. 89–90.
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  10. ^ cf. Andani 2016, pp. 199–200 for a summary.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Halm 2014.
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  13. ^ Canard 1965, pp. 850–851.
  14. ^ Daftary 2007, pp. 99–100, 104.
  15. ^ Brett 2001, p. 34.
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  17. ^ a b c d Canard 1965, p. 851.
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  20. ^ Halm 1991, pp. 19–20.
  21. ^ Brett 2001, p. 30.
  22. ^ a b c d Canard 1965, p. 852.
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  24. ^ Andani 2016, pp. 199–200.
  25. ^ Daftary 2007, pp. 8–9, 24–25.
  26. ^ Daftary 2007, pp. 101–103.
  27. ^ a b c Daftary 2007, p. 105.
  28. ^ Daftary 2007, pp. 105–106.
  29. ^ a b Daftary 2007, p. 107.
  30. ^ Daftary 2007, p. 103.
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  34. ^ Halm 1991, p. 28.
  35. ^ Halm 1991, pp. 28–29.
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  38. ^ Halm 1991, pp. 16–18.
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  40. ^ Halm 1991, pp. 22–24.
  41. ^ Daftary 2007, pp. 99–100.
  42. ^ a b Daftary 2007, p. 100.
  43. ^ Brett 2017, p. 17.
  44. ^ Daftary 2007, p. 108.
  45. ^ Halm 1991, p. 47.
  46. ^ Daftary 2007, pp. 108–110.
  47. ^ Daftary 2007, p. 116.
  48. ^ Halm 1991, p. 61.
  49. ^ Daftary 2007, pp. 116–119.
  50. ^ Daftary 2007, p. 117.
  51. ^ a b Daftary 2007, p. 120.
  52. ^ Daftary 2007, pp. 122–124.
  53. ^ Daftary 2007, pp. 123, 125.
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  55. ^ Daftary 2007, p. 127.
  56. ^ Daftary 2007, pp. 127–128.
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  58. ^ Daftary 2007, p. 141.
  59. ^ Daftary 2007, pp. 141–142.
  60. ^ Canard 1942–1947.
  61. ^ a b c d Canard 1965, p. 853.
  62. ^ Daftary 2007, pp. 143–144.
  63. ^ Lev 1995, pp. 191–192.
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  65. ^ a b Daftary 2007, p. 142.
  66. ^ Daftary 2007, p. 145.
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  68. ^ Daftary 2007, p. 146.
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  70. ^ Daftary 2007, p. 147.
  71. ^ Daftary 2007, p. 156.
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  76. ^ Daftary 2007, p. 161.
  77. ^ Daftary 2007, p. 162.
  78. ^ Daftary 2007, p. 162–164.
  79. ^ a b c d e f Canard 1965, p. 854.
  80. ^ a b c Canard 1965, p. 855.
  81. ^ Canard 1965, pp. 855–856.
  82. ^ Lev 1991, pp. 65–67.
  83. ^ Lev 1991, p. 65.
  84. ^ Lev 1991, pp. 68–69.
  85. ^ Daftary 2007, pp. 101, 118–119.
  86. ^ Halm 1991, pp. 145–147.
  87. ^ a b Daftary, Farhad (1990). Cambridge University (ed.). The Isma'ilis: Their History and Doctrines. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 115–116. ISBN 9780521429740.
  88. ^ a b Halm, Heinz. . Archived from the original on 2018-05-16. Retrieved 2018-05-15.

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  • Andani, Khalil (2016). "A Survey of Ismaili Studies (Part 1): Early Ismailism and Fatimid Ismailism". Religion Compass. 10 (8): 191–206. doi:10.1111/rec3.12205.
  • Brett, Michael (2001). The Rise of the Fatimids: The World of the Mediterranean and the Middle East in the Fourth Century of the Hijra, Tenth Century CE. The Medieval Mediterranean. Vol. 30. Leiden: BRILL. ISBN 9004117415.
  • Brett, Michael (2017). The Fatimid Empire. The Edinburgh History of the Islamic Empires. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 978-0-7486-4076-8.
  • Canard, Marius (1942–1947). "L'impérialisme des Fatimides et leur propagande". Annales de l'Institut d'Études Orientales (in French). VI: 156–193.
  • Canard, Marius (1965). "Fāṭimids". In Lewis, B.; Pellat, Ch. & Schacht, J. (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Islam. Volume II: C–G (2nd ed.). Leiden: E. J. Brill. pp. 850–862. OCLC 495469475.
  • Daftary, Farhad (2007). The Ismāʿı̄lı̄s: Their History and Doctrines (Second ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-61636-2.
  • Cortese, Delia; Calderini, Simonetta (2006). Women and the Fatimids in the World of Islam. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 0-7486-1733-7.
  • Halm, Heinz (1991). Das Reich des Mahdi: Der Aufstieg der Fatimiden (in German). Munich: C. H. Beck. ISBN 978-3-406-35497-7.
  • Halm, Heinz (2014). "Fāṭimids". In Fleet, Kate; Krämer, Gudrun; Matringe, Denis; Nawas, John; Rowson, Everett (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Islam (3rd ed.). Brill Online. ISSN 1873-9830.
  • Halm, Heinz (2015). "Prinzen, Prinzessinnen, Konkubinen und Eunuchen am fatimidischen Hof" [Princes, Princesses, Concubines and Eunuchs at the Fatimid Court]. In Pomerantz, Maurice A.; Shahin, Aram A. (eds.). The Heritage of Arabo-Islamic Learning. Studies Presented to Wadad Kadi (in German). Leiden and Boston: Brill. pp. 91–110. ISBN 978-90-04-30590-8.
  • Lev, Yaacov (1991). State and Society in Fatimid Egypt. Leiden: E. J. Brill. ISBN 90-04-09344-3.
  • Lev, Yaacov (1995). The Fatimids and Byzantium, 10th–12th Centuries. pp. 190–208. OCLC 183390203. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
  • Schrier, Omert J. (2006). "The Prehistory of the Fatimid Dynasty: Some Chronological and Genealogical Remarks". Die Welt des Orients. 36: 143–191. JSTOR 25684056.

fatimid, dynasty, state, ruled, dynasty, fatimid, caliphate, arabic, الفاطميون, isma, dynasty, arab, descent, that, ruled, extensive, empire, fatimid, caliphate, between, 1171, claiming, descent, from, fatima, they, also, held, isma, imamate, claiming, rightfu. For the state ruled by the dynasty see Fatimid Caliphate The Fatimid dynasty Arabic الفاطميون was an Isma ili Shi a dynasty of Arab descent 1 that ruled an extensive empire the Fatimid Caliphate between 909 and 1171 CE Claiming descent from Fatima and Ali they also held the Isma ili imamate claiming to be the rightful leaders of the Muslim community The line of Nizari Isma ili imams represented today by the Aga Khans claims descent from a branch of the Fatimids The Alavi Bohras predominantly based in Vadodara Baroda also descend from the branch of the Fatimids Fatimid dynastyالفاطميونParent familyBanu AliCountryFatimid CaliphateEtymologyFatimaPlace of originMecca ArabiaFounded909FounderAbd Allah al Mahdi BillahFinal rulerAl Adid li Din AllahHistoric seatRaqqada 909 921 al Mahdiya 921 948 al Mansuriya 948 973 Cairo 973 1171 TitlesImam and CaliphDissolution1171The Fatimid dynasty emerged as the leaders of the clandestine early Isma ili missionary movement da wa in the ninth century CE ostensibly acting on behalf of a hidden imam implied at the time to be Muhammad ibn Isma il The Isma ili da wa spread widely across the Islamic world then ruled by the Abbasid Caliphate In 899 the future first Fatimid caliph Abdallah proclaimed himself to be the expected imam causing a rift in the Isma ili da wa as the Qarmatians who did not recognize his imamate split off In the meantime Isma ili agents had managed to conquer large parts of Yemen and Ifriqiya as well as launch uprisings in Syria and Iraq Fleeing Abbasid persecution to Ifriqiya Abdallah proclaimed himself openly and established the Fatimid Caliphate in 909 From there the Fatimid imam caliphs extended their rule over most of the Maghreb as well as Sicily before conquering Egypt in 969 Founding Cairo as their new capital for the next two centuries the Fatimids would be based in Egypt and identified with the country At their height the Fatimids claimed control or suzerainty over much of North Africa Sicily Egypt the Levant the Hejaz Yemen and Multan The Fatimids claimed pedigree of descent from Fatima and Ali was central to their legitimacy as the legitimate imams in an unbroken divinely ordained line from Ali onwards Their initial obscurity and the publication of conflicting and incorrect genealogies by the first Fatimid caliph Abdallah al Mahdi Billah known by the diminutive Ubayd Allah by his detractors cast doubt on the accuracy of these claims which were usually rejected by contemporary Sunni and Twelver Shi a alike who considered them impostors and usurpers As a result many sources into the 20th century referred to the Fatimids by the derogatory name Ubaydids Fatimid expansion into the Levant and the ideological challenge that the ascendancy of Shi a regimes represented resulted in the Sunnis rallying around the Abbasid Caliphate in response triggering the Sunni revival of the 11th century Faced with internal turmoil and the arrival of the Seljuk Turks and then the Crusades Fatimid power began to decline in the later 11th century the dynasty was saved by passing power to powerful military viziers but this also meant that the imam caliphs often were mere puppet rulers The initial dynamism of the da wa was diminished by bitter succession disputes which resulted in large parts of the Isma ili community such as the Druze Nizaris and Tayyibis breaking off from the Fatimid allegiance and tarnished the prestige and authority of the dynasty The last of the Fatimid imam caliphs were powerless child rulers that were pawns in the hands of their viziers The last of these viziers Saladin deposed the dynasty in 1171 after the death of Caliph al Adid The remaining members of the dynasty and their offspring were placed under house arrest in Cairo until their deaths the last members of the dynasty died in the mid 13th century Contents 1 Origin 1 1 Background early Shi ism 1 2 Fatimid genealogies and controversies 1 3 The Fatimids and the early Isma ili da wa 1 4 Qarmatian schism and flight to the Maghreb 2 Ruling an empire 2 1 Establishment of the Fatimid Caliphate 2 2 Imperial expansion 2 3 Revolt of Abu Yazid 2 4 Conquest of Egypt and move of the capital to Cairo 2 5 Expansion into Syria 2 6 Reign of al Hakim 3 The dynasty in power 4 Family trees 4 1 Descent from Ali as accepted by the later Isma ilis 4 2 Genealogy according to al Mahdi s letter to the Yemeni community 4 3 Genealogy according to Bernard Lewis Hamdani de Blois and the letter of ʿAbd Allah al Mahdi Billah 5 References 6 SourcesOrigin EditBackground early Shi ism Edit Since the death of Caliph Ali ibn Abi Talib in 661 AD which led to the establishment of the Umayyad Caliphate a part of the Muslim community rejected the Umayyads as usurpers and called for the establishment of a regime led by a member of the Ahl al Bayt the Family of Muhammad The Abbasids who claimed descent from Muhammad s paternal uncle Abbas ibn Abd al Muttalib and thus claimed membership of the wider Family profited from this during their rise to power against the Umayyads but their claim was rejected by the Shi a who insisted on the exclusive right of the descendants of Hasan d 670 and Husayn d 680 Ali s sons by Muhammad s daughter Fatima 2 A line of imams emerged from the offspring of Husayn who did not openly lay claim to the caliphate but were considered by their followers as the true representatives of God on earth 2 This doctrine was founded on the designation nass of Ali by Muhammad at Ghadir Khumm and later pro Fatimid scholars held that an unbroken chain of designated imams would follow until the end of the world indeed these scholars argued that the imams existence was an inevitable necessity 3 The sixth of these imams Ja far al Sadiq appointed nass his son Isma il ibn Ja far as his successor but Isma il died before his father and when al Sadiq himself died in 765 the succession was left open One faction of al Sadiq s followers held that he had designated another son Musa al Kadhim as his heir Others followed other sons Muhammad al Dibaj and Abdallah al Aftah as the latter died soon after his followers went over to Musa s camp or even refused to believe that al Sadiq had died and expected his return as a messiah 4 Musa s adherents who constituted the majority of al Sadiq s followers followed his line down to a twelfth imam who supposedly vanished in 874 Adherents of this line are known as the Twelvers 2 5 Another branch believed that Ja far al Sadiq was followed by a seventh imam who also had gone into hiding hence this party is known as the Seveners The exact identity of that seventh imam was disputed but by the late ninth century had commonly been identified with Muhammad son of Isma il and grandson of al Sadiq From Muhammad s father Isma il the sect receives its name of Isma ili 2 6 7 Neither Isma il s nor Muhammad s lives are well known and after Muhammad s reported death during the reign of Harun al Rashid r 786 809 the history of the early Isma ili movement becomes obscure 8 Fatimid genealogies and controversies Edit Official Fatimid doctrine claimed an uninterrupted line of succession between the first Fatimid caliph Abdallah al Mahdi Billah r 909 934 and Ali and Fatima via Muhammad ibn Isma il 9 This descent was both accepted and challenged already in the Middle Ages and remains a topic of debate among scholars today 10 As the historian of Shi a Islam Heinz Halm comments The alleged descent of the dynasty from Ali ibn Abi Talib and Muhammad s daughter Fatima has been called into question by contemporaries from the very beginning and cannot be proven 11 while Michael Brett an expert on the Fatimids asserts that a factual answer to the question of their identity is impossible 12 The main problem arises with the succession linking al Mahdi with Ja far al Sadiq According to Isma ili doctrine the imams that followed Muhammad ibn Isma il were in concealment satr but early Isma ili sources do not mention them and even later official Isma ili genealogies diverge on the number names and identities of these hidden imams al a imma al masturin a problem complicated by the Isma ili claims that the hidden imams assumed various aliases for safety 13 14 Thus the pro Isma ili Prince Peter Hagop Mamour in his 1934 apologetic work Polemics on the Origin of the Fatimi Caliphs lists no fewer than fifty variations of the line of the four hidden imams between Isma il ibn Ja far and al Mahdi claiming that the various names represent pseudonyms 15 Early Isma ili sources tend to be silent on the matter from a mixture of both religious imperative since God has decreed his imams to be hidden they should remain so and apparent ignorance 16 Al Mahdi himself in a letter sent to the Isma ili community in Yemen even claimed not to be descended from Isma il ibn Ja far but from his older brother Abdallah al Aftah who is generally held to not have had any descendants at all Notably later official Fatimid genealogies rejected this version 17 18 19 In addition it appears that the first known ancestor of the Fatimid line Abdallah al Akbar the great grandfather of the first Fatimid caliph initially claimed descent not from Ali at all but from his brother Aqil ibn Abi Talib and was accepted as such by the Aqilids of Basra 20 According to Brett the line of descent claimed by the Fatimid between Ja far al Sadiq and al Mahdi reflects historical beliefs rather than historical figures for which there is little or no independent confirmation 12 as even Isma il ibn Ja far is an obscure figure let alone his supposed hidden successors 21 While pro Fatimid sources emphasize their Alid descent the dynasty named itself simply as the Alid dynasty al dawla al alawiyya many Sunni sources instead refer to them as the Ubaydids Arabic بنو عبيد romanized Banu Ubayd after the diminutive form Ubayd Allah for al Mahdi s name commonly used in Sunni sources with an apparently pejorative intent 22 11 Medieval anti Fatimid polemicists starting with Ibn Rizam and Akhu Muhsin were keen to discredit Isma ilism as an antinomian heresy and generally considered Fatimid claims to Alid descent fraudulent Instead they put forth a counter claim that al Mahdi descended from Abdallah the son of a certain Maymun al Qaddah from Khuzistan 23 that al Mahdi s real name was Sa id or that al Mahdi s father was in reality a Jew a common antisemitic trope among medieval Arab authors 9 While several medieval Sunni authors and contemporary potentates including the impeccably Alid sharifs of Mecca and Medina accepted or appeared to accept Fatimid claims at face value 24 this anti Isma ili black legend as the modern scholar Farhad Daftary calls it influenced Sunni historiographers throughout the following centuries and became official doctrine with the Baghdad Manifesto of 1011 25 Due to the paucity of actual Isma ili material until Isma ili sources started to become available and undergo scholarly examination during the 20th century the Sunni version was adopted even by some early modern Orientalists 26 Early Isma ili sources ignore the existence of Maymun al Qaddah but later Fatimid era sources were forced to confront their opponents claims about his person and tried to reconcile the conflicting genealogies accordingly 17 27 Some sectarian Isma ili especially Druze sources even claimed that during the period of concealment of the Isma ili imams the Isma ili movement was actually led by the descendants of Maymun al Qaddah until the restoration of the true line with the Fatimid caliphs 27 Later Tayyibi Isma ili authors also used the figures of Maymun al Qaddah and his son Abdallah to argue for the legality of there being a substitute or representative of the imam whenever the latter was underage 28 A further controversy that emerged already in medieval times is whether the second Fatimid caliph Muhammad al Qa im bi Amr Allah was the son of al Mahdi or whether the latter was merely usurping the position of a still hidden imam that would mean that al Qa im was the first true Fatimid imam caliph 17 27 Modern authors have tried to reconcile the genealogies The Arabist Bernard Lewis suggested the existence of two parallel series of imams trustee mustawda imams descended from Maymun al Qaddah whose task was to hide and protect the existence of the real mustakarr lit permanent imams Lewis posited that al Mahdi was the last of that line and that al Qa im was the first of the mustakarr imams to sit on the throne 17 29 Research by Vladimir Ivanov on the other hand has conclusively shown that the supposed Qaddahite descent of the Fatimids is a legend likely invented by Ibn Rizam himself the historical Maymun al Qaddah is now known to have been a disciple of Muhammad al Baqir recognized by both Isma ilis and Twelvers as an imam and both he and his son Abdallah hailed from the Hejaz For reasons of chronology alone Ibn Rizam s version is thus proven to be untenable 30 Access to more sources has furthermore led to the partial reconciliation of the conflicting accounts by positing that some of the variant names in the genealogies were indeed cover names for the Isma ili imams thus Maymun the Fortunate One is suggested as the sobriquet for Muhammad ibn Isma il especially since a source connects him with a sect known as the Maymuniyya This explanation is also present in an epistle by the fourth Fatimid caliph al Mu izz in 965 This would make the claim of al Mahdi s descent from an Abdallah ibn Maymun actually correct and lead hostile sources to confuse him with the earlier Shi a figure 31 Another suggestion by Abbas Hamdani and F de Blois is that the officially published genealogies represent a compromise between two different lines of descent from Ja far al Sadiq one from Isma il and another per al Mahdi s letter to the Yemenis from Abdallah al Aftah 32 29 Other scholars such as Halm remain skeptical while Omert Schrier and Michael Brett dismiss the Fatimid claims of Alid descent entirely as a pious fiction 33 The Fatimids and the early Isma ili da wa Edit Both the Twelvers and the Seveners held that their final imams were not dead but had simply gone into concealment and that they would soon return as a messiah the mahdi the Rightly Guided One or qa im He Who Arises to usher in the end times 2 34 The mahdi would rapidly overthrow the usurping Abbasids and destroy their capital Baghdad restore the unity of the Muslims conquer Constantinople ensure the final triumph of Islam and establish a reign of peace and justice 35 The Isma ilis in particular believed that the mahdi would reveal the true inner batin meaning of religion which was until then reserved for a few select initiates The mahdi would abolish the outer zahir forms and strictures of Islam since henceforth the true religion the religion of Adam would be manifested without the need for symbols and other mediating devices 36 While the mahdi Muhammad ibn Isma il remained hidden however he would need to be represented by agents who would gather the faithful spread the word da wa invitation calling and prepare his return The head of this secret network was the living proof of the imam s existence the hujja lit seal 37 The first known hujja was Abdallah al Akbar a wealthy merchant from Askar Mukram in what is now southwestern Iran Apart from improbable stories circulated by later anti Isma ili polemicists his exact origin is unknown 38 His teachings led to his being forced to flee his native city to escape persecution by the Abbasid authorities and seek refuge in Basra Once again his teachings attracted the attention of the authorities and he moved on to the small town of Salamiyah on the western edge of the Syrian Desert 39 There he settled as a merchant from Basra and had two sons Ahmad and Ibrahim When Abdallah died c 827 8 Ahmad succeeded his father as the head of the Isma ili movement and was in turn succeeded by his younger son Muhammad known as Abu l Shalaghlagh 40 In later Fatimid doctrine Abdallah al Akbar was presented as the eldest son of Muhammad ibn Isma il and his successor as imam followed by Ahmad 41 While Muhammad Abu l Shalaghlagh was the head of the da wa however the imamate passed to another son al Husayn d 881 2 and thence to al Husayn s son Abdallah or Sa id the future Caliph al Mahdi who was born in 873 4 42 Isma ili texts suggest that Abu l Shalaghlagh was the guardian and tutor of al Mahdi but also that he tried to usurp the succession for his own sons but failed as the latter all died prematurely 42 During the late ninth century millennialist expectations increased in the Muslim world coinciding with a deep crisis of the Abbasid Caliphate during the decade long Anarchy at Samarra the rise of breakaway and autonomous regimes in the provinces and the large scale Zanj Rebellion whose leader claimed Alid descent and proclaimed himself as the mahdi 43 In this chaotic atmosphere and with the Abbasids preoccupied with suppressing the Zanj uprising the Isma ili da wa spread rapidly aided by dissatisfaction among Twelver adherents with the political quietism of their leadership and the recent disappearance of their twelfth imam 44 Missionaries da i s like Hamdan Qarmat and his brother in law Abu Muhammad Abdan spread the network of agents to the area round Kufa in the late 870s and from there to Yemen Ibn Hawshab 882 and thence India 884 Bahrayn Abu Sa id al Jannabi 899 Persia and Ifriqiya Abu Abdallah al Shi i 893 45 46 The real leadership of the movement remained hidden at Salamiyah and only the chief da i s of each region such as Hamdan Qarmat knew and corresponded with it 47 The true head of the movement remained hidden even from the senior missionaries however and a certain Fayruz functioned as chief missionary da i al du at and gateway bab to the hidden leader 48 Qarmatian schism and flight to the Maghreb Edit In about 899 Abdallah ibn al Husayn assumed the leadership of the da wa Soon he began making alterations to the doctrine which worried Hamdan Qarmat Abdan went to Salamiyah to investigate the matter and learned that Abdallah claimed that the expected mahdi was not Muhammad ibn Isma il as commonly propagated but Abdallah himself and that Abdallah s ancestors far from being simply the hujja s of the imams were actually the imams themselves In a letter to the Yemeni community Abdallah claimed that Muhammad ibn Isma il was actually a cover name assumed by each incumbent imam and denied any particular role of Muhammad ibn Isma il as the expected mahdi who was to usher in the end times 49 These doctrinal innovations caused a major rift in the movement as Hamdan denounced the leadership in Salamiyah gathered the Iraqi da i s and ordered them to cease the missionary effort Shortly after this Hamdan disappeared from his headquarters and Abdan was assassinated by Zakarawayh ibn Mihrawayh who had remained loyal to Salamiyah 50 The schism left the early Isma ili da wa divided into two factions those who accepted Abdallah s claims and continued to follow him and became the Isma ilis proper and those who rejected them and continued to believe in the return of Muhammad ibn Isma il as mahdi who became known as the Qarmatians although anti Fatimid sources also used the label for the Fatimids themselves 51 In Iraq and Persia the community was split between the two factions but in Bahrayn the local da i s split off from Salamiyah and established an independent Qarmatian state that lasted into the 1070s 51 On the other hand Zakarawayh and his loyalists now began a series of anti Abbasid uprisings in Iraq and Syria in 902 907 with the support of the Bedouin tribes Calling themselves the Fatimiyyun the uprisings enjoyed some ephemeral success but were eventually suppressed by the still potent Abbasid army Zakarawayh apparently moved without Abdallah s authorization or prior knowledge and thus placed him in danger the Abbasid authorities began a crackdown on the da wa and Zakarawayh s sons unwittingly revealed the location and identity of Abdallah to the Abbasids who launched a man hunt against him 52 Already in 902 Abdallah with his household left Salamiyah for Ramla As the revolts instigated by Zakarawayh were suppressed Abdallah moved to Tulunid Egypt in early 904 As the Abbasids recovered control of Egypt in the next year the small party fled again While his companions expected to head to Yemen where the Isma ili da wa had enjoyed great success Abdallah turned westward and established himself at the oasis town of Sijilmasa in what is now southwestern Morocco in August 905 22 53 Ruling an empire EditEstablishment of the Fatimid Caliphate Edit In the meantime in Ifriqiya the da i Abu Abdallah al Shi i had managed to convert the Berber tribe of the Kutama to the Isma ili cause From 902 on the Kutama had gradually conquered the region from its Abbasid clients the Aghlabids On 25 March 909 Abu Abdallah and his Kutama entered the Aghlabid palace city of Raqqada in triumph 11 54 The da i proclaimed a Shi a regime but kept the name of his master secret as yet only using the title hujjat Allah God s proof and soon set out westward at the head of a large army to bring his imam to Ifriqiya 11 55 The Kutama army destroyed the Kharijite Rustamid emirate on its way and arrived at Sijilmasa in August 909 There Abdallah was acclaimed caliph by the troops 56 On 4 January 910 Abdallah entered Raqqada where he publicly proclaimed himself caliph with the regnal title of al imam al mahdi bi llah the imam rightly guided by God 57 The first crisis of the new regime occurred quickly Abu Abdallah al Shi i and his brother demanded proof of Abdallah being the mahdi or resented the limitations on their authority placed by the new ruler Al Mahdi Billah was able to eliminate them in 911 but this led to a Kutama revolt led by a child mahdi as a figurehead The uprising was defeated and the Fatimid control over the Kutama consolidated 22 58 Nevertheless Fatimid power remained fragile as it was based almost exclusively on the often truculent Kutama and later the Sanhaja tribe as well 11 Conversely the local Arabs of Ifriqiya were Maliki Sunnis while most Berber tribes further west notably the Zenata confederation adhered to various forms of Kharijism and thus opposed to the Isma ili regime of the Fatimids 22 59 Imperial expansion Edit Given the semi divine status they claimed as the rightful imams of Islam the Fatimids ambitions were not limited to Ifriqiya The Fatimid caliphs aimed to overthrow not only the rival Muslim monarchs the Abbasids of Baghdad and the Umayyads of Cordoba but also the Byzantine Empire claiming a divine right to universal sovereignty 60 Fatimid power quickly expanded across the sea to Sicily which had been conquered by the Aghlabids from the Byzantines 11 but Fatimid rule was established there only after a series of revolts by the local Muslims who at times declared for the Abbasids were suppressed 61 62 Sicily was also important as a battleground against the Byzantines which among other things allowed the Fatimids to present themselves as champions of Islam engaged in holy war against the infidels In practice relations were often more pragmatic and warfare alternated with periods of truce 61 63 From 948 on a series of hereditary governors the Kalbid dynasty governed Sicily on the Fatimids behalf 61 The Fatimids also expanded west to the rest of the Maghreb where Fez and Sijilmasa were captured in 920 921 although these conquests were difficult to hold and brought the Fatimids into conflict with the Umayyads of Cordoba 64 65 In an attempt to supplant the Abbasids al Mahdi s son and heir al Qa im bi Amr Allah led campaigns eastward to capture Egypt in 914 and 919 Both endeavours failed leaving only the Cyrenaica in Fatimid hands 11 65 Revolt of Abu Yazid Edit The fortified entrance to al Mahdiyya todayBetween 916 and 921 al Mahdi built a new residence the fortified palace city of Mahdiyya on a rocky promontory on the Ifriqiyan coast 11 When Al Mahdi died in 934 he was succeeded by his son al Qa im r 934 946 who continued his father s policies 66 Another attempted invasion of Egypt in 935 was defeated by the country s new strongman ruler Muhammad ibn Tughj al Ikhshid 67 The most notable event of al Qa im s reign was the revolt of the Zenata Berbers under the Khariji preacher Abu Yazid in 943 44 almost all of Ifriqiya succumbed to the rebels and in January 945 the rebels laid siege to Mahdiyya itself 11 68 Al Qa im died during the siege and was succeeded by his son Abu Tahir Isma il r 946 953 The new caliph concealed his father s death took to the field and in a series of battles defeated the rebel armies and captured Abu Yazid in August 947 11 69 The victory over the rebel leader who had almost destroyed the Fatimid state and was symbolically called the Dajjal the false Messiah by the Isma ili da wa was the moment when Abu Tahir declared himself as the imam and caliph in succession to his father with the name of al Mansur bi Nasr Allah The Victor with the Help of God 11 70 Al Mansur moved the Fatimid court to a new palace city al Mansuriyya near Kairouan but died soon after and was succeeded by his son al Mu izz li Din Allah r 953 975 11 Conquest of Egypt and move of the capital to Cairo Edit Al Mu izz was an excellent planner and organizer and the state he inherited had regained internal stability after the turmoils of Abu Yazid s revolt 71 His early reign saw successes against the Byzantines where the last remaining Byzantine strongholds were extinguished with the Fall of Rometta in 965 72 as well as the reconquest of the western Maghreb by the Fatimid general Jawhar in 958 960 temporarily expelling Umayyad influence from the region and extending Fatimid rule to the shores of the Atlantic Ocean 73 After these successes al Mu izz once again turned to the abandoned project of the conquest of Egypt Meticulous military and political preparations were undertaken and the agents of the Isma ili da wa engaged to promote the Fatimid cause in Egypt and suborn officials of the weakened Ikhshidid regime 61 74 As a result when the Fatimid army under Jawhar arrived in Egypt in summer 969 it faced little organized resistance Jawhar entered the Egyptian capital Fustat in July 969 and claimed the country for his master 75 Immediately he began establishing a new capital city near Fustat which came to be known as al Qahira al Mu izziyya the Victorious One of al Mu izz modern Cairo 11 Jawhar governed Egypt for the next four years as viceroy of al Mu izz restoring the country s finances 76 It was not until August 972 that al Mu izz left Ifriqiya appointing the Berber Buluggin ibn Ziri as his viceroy there In June 973 the Fatimid court arrived in Egypt and al Mu izz took up residence in Cairo 77 Expansion into Syria Edit In the meantime immediately after the conquest if Egypt Jawhar had tried to extend Fatimid rule into Syria The first Fatimid invasion failed largely due to the opposition of the Qarmatians of Bahrayn who did not hesitate to align themselves with the Abbasid caliph and denounce al Mu izz in public The Qarmatian leader al Hasan al A sam led two invasions of Egypt in 971 and again despite al Mu izz s efforts to win him over in 974 Both invasions were beaten back at the gates of Cairo forcing the Qarmatians to retreat to Bahrayn and opening the path for a renewed Fatimid attempt to conquer Syria 78 At the same time around 970 71 the two holy cities of Mecca and Medina recognized Fatimid suzerainty an important symbolic victory for the Fatimids 79 In 978 Caliph al Aziz r 975 996 captured Damascus but Fatimid power in Syria continued to be challenged whether by powerful generals or by the restive Bedouin of Palestine under the Jarrahids 79 Al Aziz s attempts to capture the Hamdanid emirate of Aleppo brought the Fatimids into conflict with the Byzantines who considered the city their protectorate 80 Attempts to take Aleppo failed in 983 992 3 and 994 5 79 and effective Fatimid power reached little past Tripoli in the north 79 In 987 the Fatimid suzerainty was recognized by the Ya furids in Yemen 79 but Fatimid attempts to induce the fellow Shi a rulers of Iraq the Buyids to recognize their suzerainty failed the Buyids rejected the Fatimids claims of Alid descent 81 Al Aziz s reign saw also a transformation in the structure and nature of the Fatimid state the Kutama who had been the main pillar of the early Fatimid regime were now complemented by Turkish military slaves ghilman as well as Black African slave soldiers while under the guidance of Ya qub ibn Killis the Fatimid administration became organized and regularized 11 Reign of al Hakim Edit Al Aziz died in 996 while preparing a major campaign against the Byzantines and Hamdanids He was succeeded by his eleven year old son al Hakim r 996 1021 11 Initially under the tutelage of powerful officials al Hakim managed to seize the reins of power for himself in 1000 11 The early years of his reign saw the conclusion of peace with Byzantium in 1001 80 as well as the great tribal revolts of Abu Rukwa in Cyrenaica in 1005 and of Mufarrij ibn Daghfal in Palestine in 1012 13 11 In the north the Uqaylids of Mosul briefly acknowledged Fatimid suzerainty in 1010 and in 1015 Aleppo did the same with Fatimid troops entering the city and imposing direct control in 1017 79 Relations with the Zirids who quickly had begun distancing themselves from Cairo s authority became more strained under al Hakim due to disputes over Cyrenaica and Tripoli 80 and in 1016 7 the new Zirid emir al Mu izz ibn Badis launched a pogrom against the remaining Isma ilis in Ifriqiya 11 From 1015 on the Fatimid Caliphate and the Isma ili community were confronted by a rise in sectarianism a series of preachers who propagated extremist versions of Isma ilism appeared preaching the imminence of the end times the divinity of al Hakim and the abolition of the Sharia The Fatimid religious establishment opposed such antinomian views but al Hakim seems to have tolerated if not encouraged them Although al Hakim never officially espoused their views the teachings of men such as al Darzi and Hamza ibn Ali resulted in the birth of the Druze faith 11 At the same time al Hakim made curious innovations in the succession by splitting up his office in two one to succeed the caliphate i e the secular office and one to succeed as imam i e as leader of the Isma ili community Furthermore he sidelined his own son and appointed two cousins to the posts thereby arousing the hostility of the Fatimid elites As a result of a conspiracy among the latter al Hakim was murdered during one of his night rides outside Cairo and his corpse disposed of never to be found 11 The dynasty in power EditDuring its rule over Egypt the members of the dynasty enjoyed immense riches founded on the possession of properties in the capital Cairo and its environs as well as commerce 82 The caliph himself was not above such enrichment and owned extensive parts of Cairo according to the mid 11th traveller Nasir Khusraw all 20 000 shops in the city as well as its caravanserais and baths and 8 000 other buildings that paid a monthly rent to the caliph s private purse diwan al khass or the private treasury khizana al khass 83 Fatimid princesses are likewise recorded as being extremely wealthy in part from estates allocated to them and in part due to their own commercial and entrepreneurial activities Thus at their death in 1050 51 two daughters of Caliph al Mu izz left estates of about 1 7 million gold dinars each while Sitt al Mulk is known to have employed an extensive staff of able administrators of both sexes for her far flung economic interests 84 Family trees EditSee also List of Fatimid caliphs Descent from Ali as accepted by the later Isma ilis Edit vteDescent of the Fatimid caliphsProphet MuhammadAli ibn Abi Talib asas Fatimaal Hasan ibn Ali 1st imam al Husayn ibn Ali 2nd imam Ali ibn Husayn Zayn al Abidin 3rd imam Zayd ibn AliMuhammad al Baqir 4th imam Zaydi imamsJa far al Sadiq 5th imam Abdallah al AftahMusa al KadhimIsma il ibn Ja far 6th imam Fathite imamsTwelver imamsMuhammad ibn Isma il 7th imam Abdallah 8th imam in concealment Ahmad 9th imam in concealment Abu Ali Muhammad Abu l Shalaghlagh al Husayn 10th imam in concealment DaughterAbdallahal Mahdi bi llah 11th imam 1st Fatimid caliph Muhammadal Qa im bi Amr Allah 12th imam 2nd Fatimid caliph denotes imams as recognized by the Isma ilis regnal names in boldSource Daftary Farhad 2007 The Ismaʿi li s Their History and Doctrines Second ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 507 ISBN 978 0 521 61636 2 Genealogy according to al Mahdi s letter to the Yemeni community Edit In a letter sent to the Isma ili community in Yemen by al Mahdi Billah which was reproduced by Ja far ibn Mansur al Yaman the following genealogy is given 85 86 Ali ibn Abi TalibFatimah bint Muhammadal Hasan ibn Alial Husayn ibn AliAli ibn Husayn Zayn al AbidinZayd ibn AliMuhammad al BaqirJa far al SadiqIsma il ibn Ja farMusa al KadhimAbdallah al AftahMuhammad ibn Isma ilTwelver imamsAbdallah al Akbar in concealment Ahmad in concealment Abu Ali Muhammad Abu l Shalaghlagh al Husayn in concealment DaughterAbdallahal Mahdi bi llahMuhammadal Qa im bi Amr Allah denotes imams regnal names in bold Genealogy according to Bernard Lewis Hamdani de Blois and the letter of ʿAbd Allah al Mahdi Billah Edit According to Bernard Lewis there were two lines of Mustawda Qaddaḥid Trustee Imams and Mustaqarr Alid Imams Hamdani and de Blois constructed two parallel lines of descendants of Jaʿfar al Sadiq 87 115 Maymun al Qaddaḥ was the chief da i and the guardian of Muḥammad ibn Isma il and ʿAbd Allah ibn Maymun al Qaddaḥ 88 who succeeded his father as the chief da i in trust and bequeathed it to his own descendants and to ʿAbdullah al Mahdi bi l Lah These were Mustawda or Qaddaḥid Trustee Imams There was a second line of Hidden or Mustaqarr Alid Imams starting with Muḥammad ibn Isma il and ending with the second Fatimid caliph Al Qa im Bi Amrillah 87 The genealogy of the Fatimid caliphs according to Bernard Lewis Hamdani de Blois and ʿAbdullah al Mahdi bi l LahReferences Edit Fatimid Caliphate portal Islam portal Ilahiane Hsain 2004 Ethnicities Community Making and Agrarian Change The Political Ecology of a Moroccan Oasis University Press of America p 43 ISBN 978 0 7618 2876 1 a b c d e Brett 2017 p 18 Brett 2001 p 31 Daftary 2007 pp 88 89 Daftary 2007 p 89 Halm 1991 pp 27 28 Daftary 2007 pp 89 90 Daftary 2007 pp 90 96 a b Canard 1965 p 850 cf Andani 2016 pp 199 200 for a summary a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Halm 2014 a b Brett 2001 p 29 Canard 1965 pp 850 851 Daftary 2007 pp 99 100 104 Brett 2001 p 34 Brett 2001 p 35 a b c d Canard 1965 p 851 Daftary 2007 p 101 Halm 1991 pp 146 147 Halm 1991 pp 19 20 Brett 2001 p 30 a b c d Canard 1965 p 852 Daftary 2007 pp 8 101 103 Andani 2016 pp 199 200 Daftary 2007 pp 8 9 24 25 Daftary 2007 pp 101 103 a b c Daftary 2007 p 105 Daftary 2007 pp 105 106 a b Daftary 2007 p 107 Daftary 2007 p 103 Daftary 2007 pp 104 105 Brett 2001 p 36 Andani 2016 p 200 Halm 1991 p 28 Halm 1991 pp 28 29 Halm 1991 p 29 Halm 1991 pp 29 30 Halm 1991 pp 16 18 Halm 1991 pp 17 20 Halm 1991 pp 22 24 Daftary 2007 pp 99 100 a b Daftary 2007 p 100 Brett 2017 p 17 Daftary 2007 p 108 Halm 1991 p 47 Daftary 2007 pp 108 110 Daftary 2007 p 116 Halm 1991 p 61 Daftary 2007 pp 116 119 Daftary 2007 p 117 a b Daftary 2007 p 120 Daftary 2007 pp 122 124 Daftary 2007 pp 123 125 Daftary 2007 pp 126 127 Daftary 2007 p 127 Daftary 2007 pp 127 128 Daftary 2007 p 128 Daftary 2007 p 141 Daftary 2007 pp 141 142 Canard 1942 1947 a b c d Canard 1965 p 853 Daftary 2007 pp 143 144 Lev 1995 pp 191 192 Canard 1965 pp 852 853 a b Daftary 2007 p 142 Daftary 2007 p 145 Daftary 2007 p 143 Daftary 2007 p 146 Daftary 2007 pp 146 147 Daftary 2007 p 147 Daftary 2007 p 156 Daftary 2007 pp 144 145 Daftary 2007 pp 156 157 Daftary 2007 p 158 Daftary 2007 p 159 Daftary 2007 p 161 Daftary 2007 p 162 Daftary 2007 p 162 164 a b c d e f Canard 1965 p 854 a b c Canard 1965 p 855 Canard 1965 pp 855 856 Lev 1991 pp 65 67 Lev 1991 p 65 Lev 1991 pp 68 69 Daftary 2007 pp 101 118 119 Halm 1991 pp 145 147 a b Daftary Farhad 1990 Cambridge University ed The Isma ilis Their History and Doctrines Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 115 116 ISBN 9780521429740 a b Halm Heinz Encyclopaedia Iranica ʿAbdallah bin Maymun Al Qaddaḥ Archived from the original on 2018 05 16 Retrieved 2018 05 15 Sources EditAndani Khalil 2016 A Survey of Ismaili Studies Part 1 Early Ismailism and Fatimid Ismailism Religion Compass 10 8 191 206 doi 10 1111 rec3 12205 Brett Michael 2001 The Rise of the Fatimids The World of the Mediterranean and the Middle East in the Fourth Century of the Hijra Tenth Century CE The Medieval Mediterranean Vol 30 Leiden BRILL ISBN 9004117415 Brett Michael 2017 The Fatimid Empire The Edinburgh History of the Islamic Empires Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 4076 8 Canard Marius 1942 1947 L imperialisme des Fatimides et leur propagande Annales de l Institut d Etudes Orientales in French VI 156 193 Canard Marius 1965 Faṭimids In Lewis B Pellat Ch amp Schacht J eds Encyclopaedia of Islam Volume II C G 2nd ed Leiden E J Brill pp 850 862 OCLC 495469475 Daftary Farhad 2007 The Ismaʿi li s Their History and Doctrines Second ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 61636 2 Cortese Delia Calderini Simonetta 2006 Women and the Fatimids in the World of Islam Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 0 7486 1733 7 Halm Heinz 1991 Das Reich des Mahdi Der Aufstieg der Fatimiden in German Munich C H Beck ISBN 978 3 406 35497 7 Halm Heinz 2014 Faṭimids In Fleet Kate Kramer Gudrun Matringe Denis Nawas John Rowson Everett eds Encyclopaedia of Islam 3rd ed Brill Online ISSN 1873 9830 Halm Heinz 2015 Prinzen Prinzessinnen Konkubinen und Eunuchen am fatimidischen Hof Princes Princesses Concubines and Eunuchs at the Fatimid Court In Pomerantz Maurice A Shahin Aram A eds The Heritage of Arabo Islamic Learning Studies Presented to Wadad Kadi in German Leiden and Boston Brill pp 91 110 ISBN 978 90 04 30590 8 Lev Yaacov 1991 State and Society in Fatimid Egypt Leiden E J Brill ISBN 90 04 09344 3 Lev Yaacov 1995 The Fatimids and Byzantium 10th 12th Centuries pp 190 208 OCLC 183390203 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help Schrier Omert J 2006 The Prehistory of the Fatimid Dynasty Some Chronological and Genealogical Remarks Die Welt des Orients 36 143 191 JSTOR 25684056 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fatimid dynasty amp oldid 1170166753, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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