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Harun al-Rashid

Abu Ja'far Harun ibn Muhammad al-Mahdi (Arabic: أَبُو جَعْفَر هَارُون ٱبْنِ مُحَمَّد ٱلْمَهْدِيّ, romanizedAbū Ja'far Hārūn ibn Muḥammad al-Mahdī) or simply Harun ibn al-Mahdi (Arabic: هَارُون ٱبْنِ ٱلْمَهْدِيّ; c. 763 or 766 – 24 March 809), famously known as Harun al-Rashid (Arabic: هَارُون ٱلرَّشِيد, romanized: Hārūn ar-Rashīd), was the fifth Abbasid caliph of the Abbasid Caliphate, reigning from September 786 until his death in March 809. His reign is traditionally regarded to be the beginning of the Islamic Golden Age. His epithet al-Rashid translates to "the Orthodox", "the Just", "the Upright", or "the Rightly-Guided".

Harun al-Rashid
هَارُون ٱلرَّشِيد
Caliph
Commander of the Faithful
Gold dinar of Harun al-Rashid, minted in Baghdad, 184 AH (800–801 CE)
5th Caliph of the Abbasid Caliphate
Reign14 September 786 – 24 March 809
PredecessorAl-Hadi
SuccessorAl-Amin
Born17 March 763 or February 766
Ray, Jibal, Abbasid Caliphate
(present-day Tehran Province, Iran)
Died24 March 809(809-03-24) (aged 43)
Tus, Khorasan, Abbasid Caliphate
(present-day Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran)
Burial
Tomb of Harun al-Rashid in Imam Reza Mosque, Mashhad, Iran
Spouse
Issue
Names
Harun al-Rashid ibn Muhammad al-Mahdi
DynastyAbbasid
FatherAl-Mahdi
MotherAl-Khayzuran
ReligionSunni Islam

Harun established the legendary library Bayt al-Hikma ("House of Wisdom") in Baghdad in present-day Iraq, and during his rule Baghdad began to flourish as a world center of knowledge, culture and trade.[1] During his rule, the family of Barmakids, which played a deciding role in establishing the Abbasid Caliphate, declined gradually. In 796, he moved his court and government to Raqqa in present-day Syria. Domestically, Harun pursued policies similar to those of his father Al-Mahdi. He released many of the Umayyads and 'Alids his brother Al-Hadi had imprisoned and declared amnesty for all political groups of the Quraysh.[2] Large scale hostilities broke out with Byzantium, and under his rule, the Abbasid Empire reached its peak.[3]

A Frankish mission came to offer Harun friendship in 799. Harun sent various presents with the emissaries on their return to Charlemagne's court, including a clock that Charlemagne and his retinue deemed to be a conjuration because of the sounds it emanated and the tricks it displayed every time an hour ticked.[4][5][6] Portions of the fictional One Thousand and One Nights are set in Harun's court and some of its stories involve Harun himself.[7] Harun's life and court have been the subject of many other tales, both factual and fictitious.

Early life edit

Hārūn was born in Rey, then part of Jibal in the Abbasid Caliphate, in present-day Tehran Province, Iran. He was the son of al-Mahdi, the third Abbasid caliph (r. 775–786), and his wife al-Khayzuran, (a former slave girl from Yemen) who was a woman of strong and independent personality who greatly and determinedly influenced affairs of state in the reigns of her husband and sons. Growing up Harun studied history, geography, rhetoric, music, poetry, and economics. However, most of his time was dedicated to mastering hadith and the Quran. In addition, he underwent advanced physical education as a future mujahid, and as a result, he practiced swordplay, archery, and learned the art of war.[8] His birth date is debated, with various sources giving dates from 763 to 766.[9]

Before becoming a caliph, in 780 and again in 782, Hārūn had already nominally led campaigns against the caliphate's traditional enemy, the Eastern Roman Empire, ruled by Empress Irene. The latter expedition was a huge undertaking, and even reached the Asian suburbs of Constantinople. According to the Muslim chronicler Al-Tabari, the Byzantines lost tens of thousands of soldiers, and Harun employed 20,000 mules to carry the riches back. Upon his return to the Abbasid realm, the cost of a sword fell to one dirham and the price of a horse to a single gold Byzantine dinar.[10]

Harun's raids against the Byzantines elevated his political image and once he returned, he was given the laqab "al-Rashid", meaning "the Rightly-Guided One". He was promoted to crown prince and given the responsibility of governing the empire's western territories, from Syria to Azerbaijan.[11]

Upon the death of his father in 785, Harun's brother al-Hadi became caliph. However, al-Hadi's reign was brief: a year and two months. Al-Hadi clashed with their mother over her great influence in court. The historian al-Tabari notes varying accounts of al-Hadi's death, e.g. an abdominal ulcer or assassination prompted by his own mother.

Caliphate edit

 
Map of the Abbasid Caliphate and its provinces, c. 788

On the night of al-Hadi's death, al-Khayzuran quickly released Yahya the Barmakid from prison and ordered him to pay the army's wages, send the letters to the governors to pledge allegiance to al-Rashīd, and prepare him as caliph. They summoned the commanders of the army, Harthama ibn A'yan and Khuzayma ibn Khazim, and asked them to swear allegiance to Harun as caliph. Khuzayma reportedly gathered and armed 5,000 of his own followers, dragged the Ja'far ibn al-Hādī from his bed and forced him to publicly renounce his claims in favour of Hārūn. Hārūn became caliph in 786 when he was in his early twenties. At the time, he was tall, good looking, and slim but strongly built, with wavy hair and olive skin.[12] On the day of accession, his son al-Ma'mun was born, and al-Amin some little time later: the latter was the son of Zubaida, a granddaughter of al-Mansur (founder of the city of Baghdad); so he took precedence over the former, whose mother was a Persian. Upon his accession, Harun led Friday prayers in Baghdad's Great Mosque and then sat publicly as officials and the layman alike lined up to swear allegiance and declare their happiness at his ascent to Amir al-Mu'minin.[13] He began his reign by appointing very able ministers, who carried on the work of the government so well that they greatly improved the condition of the people.[14]

Under Hārūn al-Rashīd's rule, Baghdad flourished into the most splendid city of its period. Tribute paid by many rulers to the caliph funded architecture, the arts and court luxuries.[citation needed]

In 796, Hārūn moved the entire court to Raqqa on the middle Euphrates, where he spent 12 years, most of his reign. He appointed the Hanafi jurist Muhammad al-Shaybani as qadi (judge), but dismissed him in 803. He visited Baghdad only once. Several reasons may have influenced the decision to move to Raqqa: its closeness to the Byzantine border, its excellent communication lines via the Euphrates to Baghdad and via the Balikh river to the north and via Palmyra to Damascus, rich agricultural land, and the strategic advantage over any rebellion which might arise in Syria and the middle Euphrates area. Abu al-Faraj al-Isfahani, in his anthology of poems, depicts the splendid life in his court. In Raqqa the Barmakids managed the fate of the empire, and both heirs, al-Amin and al-Ma'mun, grew up there. At some point the royal court relocated again to Al-Rayy, the capital city of Khorasan, where the famous philologist and leader of the Kufan school, Al-Kisa'i, accompanied the caliph with his entourage. When al-Kisa'i became ill while in Al-Rayy, it is said that Harun visited him daily. It seems al-Shaybani and al-Kisa'i both died there on the same day in 804.

For the administration of the whole empire, he fell back on his mentor and longtime associate Yahya bin Khalid bin Barmak. Rashid appointed him as his vizier with full executive powers, and, for seventeen years, Yahya and his sons served Rashid faithfully in whatever assignment he entrusted to them.[15]

Harun made pilgrimages to Mecca by camel (2,820 km or 1,750 mi from Baghdad) several times, e.g., 793, 795, 797, 802 and last in 803. Tabari concludes his account of Harun's reign with these words: "It has been said that when Harun ar-Rashid died, there were nine hundred million odd (dirhams) in the state treasury."[16]

According to Shia belief, Harun imprisoned and poisoned Musa ibn Ja'far, the 7th Imam, in Baghdad.[citation needed]

Under al-Rashid, each city had its own law enforcement, which besides keeping order was supposed to examine the public markets in order to ensure, for instance, that proper scales and measures were used; enforce the payment of debts; and clamp down on illegal activities such as gambling, usury, and sales of alcohol.[17]

Harun was a great patron of art and learning, and is best known for the unsurpassed splendor of his court and lifestyle. Some of the stories, perhaps the earliest, of "The Thousand and One Nights" were inspired by the glittering Baghdad court. The character King Shahryar (whose wife, Scheherazade, tells the tales) may have been based on Harun himself.[18]

Advisors edit

 
A silver dirham minted in Madinat al-Salam (Baghdad) in 170 AH (786 CE). At the reverse, the inner marginal inscription says: "By order of the slave of God, Harun, Commander of the Faithful"

Hārūn was influenced by the will of his powerful mother in the governance of the empire until her death in 789; When he became caliph, Harun allowed her (Khayzuran) a free hand and, at times, restrained his own desires out of deference to her expressed wishes, and Khayzuran acted as an overseer of affairs, and Yahya deferred to her and acted on her advice. His vizier (chief minister) Yahya the Barmakid, Yahya's sons (especially Ja'far ibn Yahya), and other Barmakids generally controlled the administration. The position of Persians in the Abbasid caliphal court reached its peak during al-Rashid's reign.[19]

The Barmakids were an Iranian family (from Balkh) that dated back to the Barmak, a hereditary Buddhist priest of Nava Vihara, who converted after the Islamic conquest of Balkh and became very powerful under al-Mahdi. Yahya had helped Hārūn to obtain the caliphate, and he and his sons were in high favor until 798, when the caliph threw them in prison and confiscated their land. Muhammad ibn Jarir al-Tabari dates this event to 803 and lists various reasons for it: Yahya's entering the Caliph's presence without permission; Yahya's opposition to Muhammad ibn al Layth, who later gained Harun's favour; and Ja'far's release of Yahya ibn Abdallah ibn Hasan, whom Harun had imprisoned.[citation needed]

The fall of the Barmakids is far more likely due to their behaving in a manner that Harun found disrespectful (such as entering his court unannounced) and making decisions in matters of state without first consulting him.[citation needed] Al-Fadl ibn al-Rabi succeeded Yahya the Barmakid as Harun's chief minister.[citation needed]

Diplomacy edit

 
Harun al-Rashid at left receiving a delegation sent by Charlemagne to his court in Baghdad.
1864 painting by Julius Köckert.

Both Einhard and Notker the Stammerer refer to envoys traveling between the courts of Harun and Charlemagne, king of the Franks, and entering friendly discussions about Christian access to holy sites and gift exchanges. Notker mentions Charlemagne sent Harun Spanish horses, colorful Frisian cloaks and impressive hunting dogs. In 802 Harun sent Charlemagne a present consisting of silks, brass candelabra, perfume, balsam, ivory chessmen, a colossal tent with many-colored curtains, an elephant named Abul-Abbas, and a water clock that marked the hours by dropping bronze balls into a bowl, as mechanical knights – one for each hour – emerged from little doors which shut behind them. The presents were unprecedented in Western Europe and may have influenced Carolingian art.[20] This exchange of embassies was due to the fact that Harun was interested, like Charlemagne, in subduing the Umayyad emirs of Córdoba. Also, the common enmity against the Byzantines was what brought Harun closer to the contemporary Charlemagne.[citation needed]

When the Byzantine empress Irene was deposed in 802, Nikephoros I became emperor and refused to pay tribute to Harun, saying that Irene should have been receiving the tribute the whole time. News of this angered Harun, who wrote a message on the back of the Byzantine emperor's letter and said, "In the name of God the most merciful, From Amir al-Mu'minin Harun ar-Rashid, commander of the faithful, to Nikephoros, dog of the Romans. Thou shalt not hear, thou shalt behold my reply". After campaigns in Asia Minor, Nikephoros was forced to conclude a treaty, with humiliating terms.[21][22] According to Dr Ahmad Mukhtar al-Abadi, it is due to the particularly fierce second retribution campaign against Nikephoros, that the Byzantine practically ceased any attempt to incite any conflict against the Abbasid again until the rule of Al-Ma'mun.[23][24]

An alliance was established with the Chinese Tang dynasty by Ar-Rashid after he sent embassies to China.[25][26] He was called "A-lun" in the Chinese Tang Annals.[27] The alliance was aimed against the Tibetans.[28][29][30][31][32]

When diplomats and messengers visited Harun in his palace, he was screened behind a curtain. No visitor or petitioner could speak first, interrupt, or oppose the caliph. They were expected to give their undivided attention to the caliph and calculate their responses with great care.[33]

Rebellions edit

 
Dinar of Harun 171 AH (AD 787–88), the early years of his reign

Because of the Thousand and One Nights tales, Harun al-Rashid turned into a legendary figure obscuring his true historic personality. In fact, his reign initiated the political disintegration of the Abbasid caliphate. Syria was inhabited by tribes with Umayyad sympathies and remained the bitter enemy of the Abbasids, while Egypt witnessed uprisings against Abbasids due to maladministration and arbitrary taxation. The Umayyads had been established in Spain in 755, the Idrisids in Morocco in 788, and the Aghlabids in Ifriqiya (modern Tunisia) in 800. Besides, unrest flared up in Yemen, and the Kharijites rose in rebellion in Daylam, Kerman, Fars and Sistan. Revolts also broke out in Khorasan, and al-Rashid waged many campaigns against the Byzantines.[citation needed]

Al-Rashid appointed Ali bin Isa bin Mahan as the governor of Khorasan, who tried to bring to heel the princes and chieftains of the region, and to reimpose the full authority of the central government on them. This new policy met with fierce resistance and provoked numerous uprisings in the region.[citation needed]

Family edit

Harun's first wife was Zubaidah. She was the daughter of his paternal uncle, Ja'far and maternal aunt Salsal, sister of Al-Khayzuran.[34] They married in 781–82, at the residence of Muhammad bin Sulayman in Baghdad. She had one son, Caliph Al-Amin.[35] She died in 831.[36] Another of his wives was Azizah, daughter of Ghitrif, brother of Al-Khayzuran.[37] She had been formerly married to Sulayman bin Abi Ja'far, who had divorced her.[36] Another was Amat-al-Aziz Ghadir, who had been formerly a concubine of his brother al-Hadi.[37] She had one son Ali.[35] She died in 789.[37] Another wife was Umm Muhammad, the daughter of Salih al-Miskin and Umm Abdullah, the daughter of Isa bin Ali. They married in November–December 803 in Al-Raqqah. She had been formerly been married to Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi, who had repudiated her.[36] Another wife married around the same year was Abbasa, daughter of Sulayman ibn Abi Ja'far.[36] Another wife was Jurashiyyah al-Uthmanniyah. She was the daughter of Abdullah bin Muhammad, and had descended from Uthman, the third Caliph of the Rashidun.[36]

Harun's earliest known concubine was Hailanah. She had been a slave girl of Yahya ibn Khalid, the Barmakid. It was she who begged him, while he was yet a prince, to take her away from the elderly Yahya. Harun then approached Yahya, who presented him with the girl. She died three years later[38] in 789–90,[39] and Harun mourned her deeply.[38] Another concubine was Dananir. She was a Barmakid, and had been formerly a slave girl of Yahya ibn Khalid. She had been educated at Medina and had studied instrumental and vocal music.[40] Another concubine was Marajil. She was a Persian, and came from distant Badhaghis in Persia. She was one of the ten maids presented to Harun. She gave birth to Abdullah (future caliph Al-Ma'mun) on the night of Harun's accession to the throne, in September 786, in whose birth she died. Her son was then adopted by Zubaidah.[35] Another concubine was Qasif, mother of Al-Qasim. He was Harun's second son, born to a concubine mother. Harun's eldest daughter Sukaynah was also born to her.[41]

Another concubine was Maridah. Her father was Shabib.[42] She was a Sogdian, and was born in Kufah. She was one of the ten maids presented to Harun by Zubaidah. She had five children. These were Abu Ishaq (future caliph al-Mu'tasim), Abu Isma'il, Umm Habib, and two others whose names are unknown. She was Harun's favourite concubine.[43] Some other favourite concubines were, Dhat al-Khal, Sihr, and Diya. Diya died much to Harun's sorrow.[44] Dhat al-Khal also known as Khubth[45] was a singer, belonging to a slave-dealer who was himself a freedman of Abbasah, the sister of Al-Rashid. She caught the fancy of Ibrahim al-Mausili, whose songs in praise of her soon reached Harun's attention, who bought her for the enormous sum of 70,000 dinars.[46] She was the mother of Harun's son, Abu al-Abbas Muhammad.[45][46] Sihr was mother of Harun's daughters, Khadijah[46] and Karib.[47] Another concubine was Inan. Her father was Abdullah.[48] She was born and brought up in the Yamamah in central Arabia. She was a singer and a poet, and had been a slave girl of Abu Khalid al-Natifi.[49] She bore Harun two sons, both of whom died young. She accompanied him to Khurasan where he, and, soon after, she died.[50] Another was Ghadid, also known as Musaffa, and she was mother of Harun's daughters, Hamdunah[51] and Fatimah.[47] She was his favourite concubine.[51] Hamdunah and Fatimah married Al-Hadi's sons, Isma'il and Ja'far respectively.[52]

Another of Harun's concubines was the captive daughter of a Greek churchman of Heraclea acquired with the fall of that city in 806. Zubaidah once more presented him with one of her personal maids who had caught his fancy. Harun's half-brother, while governor of Egypt from 795 to 797, also sent him an Egyptian maid who immediately won his favour.[53] Some other concubines were namely: Ri'm, mother of Salih; Irbah, mother of Abu Isa Muhammad; Sahdhrah, mother of Abu Yaqub Muhammad; Rawah, mother of Abu Sulayman Muhammad; Dawaj, mother of Abu Ali Muhammad; Kitman, mother of Abu Ahmad Muhammad; Hulab, mother of Arwa; Irabah, mother of Umm al-Hassan; Sukkar, mother of Umm Abiha; Rahiq, mother of Umm Salamah; Khzq, mother of Umm al-Qasim; Haly, mother of Umm Ja'far Ramlah; Aniq, mother of Umm Ali; Samandal, mother of Umm al-Ghaliyah; Zinah, mother of Raytah.[54]

Anecdotes edit

Many anecdotes attached themselves to the person of Harun al-Rashid in the centuries following his rule. Saadi of Shiraz inserted a number of them into his Gulistan.

Al-Masudi relates a number of interesting anecdotes in The Meadows of Gold that illuminate the caliph's character. For example, he recounts Harun's delight when his horse came in first, closely followed by al-Ma'mun's, at a race that Harun held at Raqqa. Al-Masudi tells the story of Harun setting his poets a challenging task. When others failed to please him, Miskin of Medina succeeded superbly well. The poet then launched into a moving account of how much it had cost him to learn that song. Harun laughed and said that he did not know which was more entertaining, the song or the story. He rewarded the poet.[55]

There is also the tale of Harun asking Ishaq ibn Ibrahim to keep singing. The musician did so until the caliph fell asleep. Then, strangely, a handsome young man appeared, snatched the musician's lute, sang a very moving piece (al-Masudi quotes it) and left. On awakening and being informed of that, Harun said Ishaq ibn Ibrahim had received a supernatural visitation.

Shortly before he died, Harun is said to have been reading some lines by Abu al-Atahiya about the transitory nature of the power and pleasures of this world, an anecdote related to other caliphs as well.

Every morning, Harun gave one thousand dirhams to charity and made one hundred prostrations a day.[16] Harun famously used to look up at rain clouds in the sky and said: "rain where you like, but I will get the land tax!"[56]

Harun was terrified for his soul in the afterlife. It was reported that he quickly cried when he thought of God and read poems about the briefness of life.[57]

Soon after he became caliph, Harun asked his servant to bring him Ibn al-Sammak, a renowned scholar, to obtain wisdom from him. Harun asked al-Sammak what he would like to tell him. Al-Sammak replied, "I would like you always to remember that one day you will stand alone before your God. You will then be consigned either to Heaven or to Hell." That was too harsh for Harun's liking, and he was obviously disturbed. His servant cried out in protest that the Prince of the Faithful will definitely go to heaven after he has ruled justly on earth. However, al-Sammak ignored the interruption and looked straight into the eyes of Harun and said that "you will not have this man to defend you on that day."[57]

An official, Maan ibn Zaidah, had fallen out of favor with Harun. When Harun saw him in court, he said that "you have grown old." The elderly man responded, "Yes, O Commander of the Faithful in your service." Harun replied, "But you have still some energy left." The old man replied that "what I have, is yours to dispose of as you wish... and I am bold in opposing your foes." Harun was satisfied with the encounter and made the man governor of Basra for his final years.[58]

On Hajj, he distributed large amounts of money to the people of Mecca and Medina and to poor pilgrims en route. He always took a number of ascetics with him, and whenever he was unable to go on pilgrimage, he sent dignitaries and three hundred clerics at his own expense.[59]

One day, Harun was visiting a dignitary when he was struck by his beautiful slave. Harun asked the man to give her to him. The man obliged but was visibly disturbed by the loss. Afterward, Harun felt sorry for what he had done and gave her back.[60]

Harun was an excellent horseman, enjoyed hunting (with Salukis, falcons, and hawks) and was fond of military exercises such as charging dummies with his sword. Harun was also the first Abbasid caliph to have played and promoted chess.[61]

Harun desired a slave girl that was owned by an official named Isa who refused to give her to Harun, despite threats. Isa explained that he swore (in the middle of a sex act) that if he ever gave away or sold her, he would divorce his wife, free his slaves, and give all of his possessions to the impoverished. Yusuf, a judge and advisor to Harun, was called to arbitrate the case and to figure out a legal way for Isa to maintain his belongings even if Harun walked away with the girl. Yusuf decided that if Isa gave half of the girl to Harun and sold him the other half, it could not be said that Isa had either given her away or sold her, keeping his promise.[62]

Harun had an anxious soul and supposedly was prone to walk the streets of Baghdad at night. At times Ja'far ibn Yahya accompanied him. The night-time tours likely arose from a genuine and sympathetic concern in the well-being of his people, for it is said that he was assiduous to relieve any of their trials and tend to their needs.[58]

Death edit

A major revolt led by Rafi ibn al-Layth was started in Samarqand which forced Harun al-Rashid to move to Khorasan. He first removed and arrested Ali bin Isa bin Mahan but the revolt continued unchecked. (Harun had dismissed Ali and replaced him with Harthama ibn A'yan, and in 808 marched himself east to deal with the rebel Rafi ibn al-Layth, but died in March 809 while at Tus).[63][64] Harun al-Rashid became ill and died very soon after when he reached Sanabad village in Tus and was buried in Dar al-Imarah, the summer palace of Humayd ibn Qahtaba, the Abbasid governor of Khorasan. Due to this historical event, the Dar al-Imarah was known as the Mausoleum of Haruniyyeh. The location later became known as Mashhad ("The Place of Martyrdom") because of the martyrdom of Imam al-Ridha in 818. Harun al-Rashid and his first Heir, prince al-Amin (Al-Amin was nominated first heir, Al-Ma'mun second and Al-Qasim was third heir.) After Harun's death in 809 he was succeeded by Al-Amin.

Legacy edit

Al-Rashid become a prominent figure in the Islamic and Arab culture, he has been described as one of the most famous Arabs in history. All the Abbasid caliphs after him were his descendants.

About his accession famous poet and musician al-Mawsili said:

Did you not see how the sun came out of hiding on Harun's accession and flooded the world with light[65]

About his reign, famous Arab historian Al-Masudi said:

So great were the Splendour and riches of his reign, such was its prosperity, that this period has been called "the Honeymoon".[66]

Al-Rashid become the progenitor of subsequent Abbasid caliphs. Al-Rashid nominated his son Muhammad al-Amin as his first heir. Muhammad had an elder half-brother, Abdallah, the future al-Ma'mun (r. 813–833), who had been born in September 786 (six months older than him) However, Abdallah's mother was a Persian concubine, and his pure Abbasid lineage gave Muhammad seniority over his half-brother.[67][68] Indeed, he was the only Abbasid caliph to claim such descent.[68] Already in 792, Harun had Muhammad receive the oath of allegiance (bay'ah) with the name of al-Amīn ("The Trustworthy"), effectively marking him out as his main heir, while Abdallah was not named second heir, under the name al-Maʾmūn ("The Trusted One") until 799.[67][68] and his third son Qasim was nominated third heir, however he never became caliph. Among his sons, al-Amin became caliph after his death in 809. Al-Amin ruled from 809 to 813, until a civil war broke between him and his brother Abdallah al-Ma'mun (Governor of Khorasan). The reason of war were that caliph al-Amin tried to remove al-Ma'mun as his heir. Al-Ma'mun became caliph in 813 and ruled the caliphate for two decades until 833. He was succeeded by another of Harun's son Abu Ishaq Muhammad (better known as Al-Mu'tasim), his mother was Marida, a concubine.[69][70]

In popular culture edit

  • In Shinobu Ohtaka's Magi: The Labyrinth of Magic, the former king of Balbadd is called Rashid Saluja. In the spin-off Adventure of Sinbad, Rashid's alias is Harun.
  • Henry Wadsworth Longfellow wrote a short poem titled "Haroun Al Raschid".
  • O. Henry uses the character in his story "The Caliph and the Cad". The theme of the story is "turning the tables on Haroun al Raschid".
  • Alfred Tennyson wrote a poem in his youth entitled "Recollections of the Arabian Nights". Every stanza (except the last one) ends with "of good Haroun Alraschid".
  • Harun al-Rashid was a main figure and character in several of the stories in some of the oldest versions of the One Thousand and One Nights.
  • The Indian television series Alif Laila (1993–1997), an adaptation of the Arabian Nights, features several tales involving the caliph from the classic collection of stories.[71]
  • Hārūn ar-Rashīd figures throughout James Joyce's Ulysses, in a dream of Stephen Dedalus, one of the protagonists. Stephen's efforts to recall this dream continue throughout the novel, culminating in the novel's fifteenth episode, wherein some characters also take on the guise of Hārūn.
  • Harun al-Rashid is celebrated in a 1923 poem by W. B. Yeats, "The Gift of Harun al-Rashid".[72][73]
  • A story of one of Harun's wanderings provides the climax to the narrative game of titles at the end of Italo Calvino's If on a winter's night a traveler (1979). In Calvino's story, Harun wanders at night, only to be drawn into a conspiracy in which he is selected to assassinate the Caliph Harun-al-Rashid.
  • In Charles Dickens' 1842 travelogue, American Notes for General Circulation, he compares American supporters of slavery to the "Caliph Harun al-Rashid in his angry robe of scarlet".
  • The two protagonists of Salman Rushdie's 1990 novel Haroun and the Sea of Stories are Haroun and his father Rashid Khalifa.
  • In the Sten science fiction novels by Allan Cole and Chris Bunch, the character of the Eternal Emperor uses the name "H. E. Raschid" when incognito; this is confirmed, in the final book of the series, as a reference to the character from Burton's translation of The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night.
  • The movie The Golden Blade (1952), starring Rock Hudson and Piper Laurie depicts the adventures of Harun who uses a magic sword to free a fairy-tale Baghdad from Jafar, the evil usurper of the throne. After he finally wins the hand of princess Khairuzan she awards him the title Al-Rashid ("the righteous").
  • The comic book The Sandman features a story (issue 50, "Ramadan") set in the world of the One Thousand and One Nights, with Hārūn ar-Rashīd as the protagonist. It highlights his historical and mythical role as well as his discussion of the transitory nature of power. The story is included in the collection The Sandman: Fables and Reflections.
  • Haroun El Poussah in the French comic strip Iznogoud is a satirical version of Hārūn ar-Rashīd.
  • In Quest for Glory II, the sultan who adopts the Hero as his son is named Hārūn ar-Rashīd. He is often seen prophesying on the streets of Shapeir as The Poet Omar.
  • Harun al-Rashid appears as the leader of Arabia in the video game Civilization V.[74]
  • Future US President Theodore Roosevelt, when he was a commissioner for the New York Police Department, was nicknamed "Haroun-al-Roosevelt" in several local newspapers.
  • In The Master and Margarita, by novelist Mikhail Bulgakov, Harun al-Rashid is referenced by the character Korovyev in which he warns a door man not to judge him "by [his] suit", and to reference the story of "the famous caliph, Harun al-Rashid".
  • In the 1924 film Waxworks, a poet is hired by a wax museum proprietor to write back-stories for three wax models. Among these wax models is Harun al-Rashid, played by Emil Jannings.
  • In the 2006 novel Variable Star by Robert Heinlein and Spider Robinson, chapter 1 is prefaced with a quotation from Alfred, Lord Tennyson's "Recollections of the Arabian Nights" regarding "good Harun Alrashid", the relevance of which becomes apparent in chapter 2 when one character relates stories (probably apocryphal and presumably drawn from Tennyson) of Harun al-Rahsid to another character in order to use them as an analogy.
  • The second chapter in the novel Prince Otto by Robert Louis Stevenson has the title "In which the Prince Plays Haroun al-Raschid".
  • Haroun al-Rashid has a character page in the video game Crusader Kings II, and it is possible to play as his descendants of the Abbasid dynasty.
  • Harun al-Rashid appears in the children's comic book Mampato, in the stories "Bromiznar de Bagdad" and "Ábrete Sesamo", by the Chilean author Themo Lobos. In this story, al-Rashid is shown at first as lazy and indolent, but after a series of adventures he decides to take the leading role against an evil vizier and help the main character, Mampato.
  • Frank Lloyd Wright designed a monument to al-Rashid as part of his proposed 1957 urban renewal plan for Baghdad, Iraq.[75]
  • In his book The Power Broker, Robert Caro compares New York City mayor Fiorello H. La Guardia to Harun al-Rashid in the way each "roam[ed] his domain."[76]
  • The Syrian television series Harun Al-Rashid (2018), starring Kosai Khauli, Karis Bashar, and Yasser Al-Masri focuses on Harun and his relation with his brother Caliph Al-Hadi, and that preceded Harun's ascent to the Caliphate. It also focuses on his relations with his elder sons and nomination of Al-Amin and Al-Ma'mun as heir.

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Audun Holme, Geometry: Our Cultural Heritage p. 150.
  2. ^ Ghareeb, Edmund A.; Dougherty, Beth (18 March 2004). Historical Dictionary of Iraq. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 9780810865686.
  3. ^ Ghareeb, Edmund A.; Dougherty, Beth (18 March 2004). Historical Dictionary of Iraq. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 9780810865686.
  4. ^ André Clot, Harun al-Rashid and the world of the thousand and one nights, p. 97.
  5. ^ Royal Frankish Annals, DCCCVII.
  6. ^ Charlemagne: Translated sources, p. 98.
  7. ^ André Clot, Harun al-Rashid and the world of the thousand and one nights.
  8. ^ Bobrick 2012, p. 38.
  9. ^ Watt, William Montgomery (20 March 2022). Hārūn al-Rashīd. Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 29 April 2022.
  10. ^ Bobrick 2012, p. 25.
  11. ^ Bobrick 2012, p. 24.
  12. ^ Bobrick 2012, p. 37.
  13. ^ Bobrick 2012, p. 36.
  14. ^ New Arabian nights' entertainments, Volume 3.
  15. ^ Masʻūdī, Paul Lunde, Caroline Stone, The meadows of gold: the Abbasids p. 62.
  16. ^ a b Bobrick 2012, p. 42.
  17. ^ Bobrick 2012, p. 46.
  18. ^ "Harun al-Rashid, the Abbasid Caliph Who Inspired the 'Arabian Nights'". ThoughtCo. Retrieved 28 June 2022.
  19. ^ Hovannisian, Richard G.; Sabagh, Georges (1998). The Persian Presence in the Islamic World. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521591850.
  20. ^ Lodovico Antonio Muratori, Giuseppe Catalani (1742), Annali d'Italia: Dall'anno 601 dell'era volare fino all'anno 840, Monaco, p. 465. Muratori describes only some of these gifts.
  21. ^ Tarikh ath-Thabari 4/668–669.
  22. ^ Ibn Kathir, Al-Bidaya wa'l-Nihaya v 13 p. 650.
  23. ^ Mukhtar al-Abadi, Ahmad (2019). In Abbasid and Andalusian History. Ain University Library. Retrieved 28 September 2021.
  24. ^ C.E, Bosworth (1989). The History of al-Tabari Vol. 30: The 'Abbasid Caliphate in Equilibrium: The Caliphates of Musa al-Hadi and Harun al-Rashid A.D. 785–809/A.H. 169–193. SUNY Series in Near Eastern Studies. Albany, New York: State University of New York Press. p. 365. ISBN 978-0-88706-564-4. Retrieved 28 September 2021.
  25. ^ Dennis Bloodworth, Ching Ping Bloodworth (2004). The Chinese Machiavelli: 3000 years of Chinese statecraft. Transaction Publishers. p. 214. ISBN 0-7658-0568-5. Retrieved 28 June 2010.
  26. ^ Herbert Allen Giles (1926). Confucianism and its rivals. Forgotten Books. p. 139. ISBN 1-60680-248-8. Retrieved 14 December 2011.
  27. ^ Marshall Broomhall (1910). Islam in China: a neglected problem. London: Morgan & Scott, ltd. pp. 25, 26. Retrieved 14 December 2011.
  28. ^ Bajpai 2002, p. 15.
  29. ^ Bajpai 1981, p. 55.
  30. ^ Chaliand, Gérard (1970). Nomadic Empires: From Mongolia to the Danube. Transaction Publishers. Retrieved 1 September 2018 – via Google Books.
  31. ^ Luciano Petech, A Study of the Chronicles of Ladakh (Calcutta, 1939), pp. 73–73.
  32. ^ Luciano Petech, A Study of the Chronicles of Ladakh (Calcutta, 1939), pp. 55–85.
  33. ^ Bobrick 2012, p. 40.
  34. ^ Abbott 1946, pp. 29–30.
  35. ^ a b c Abbott 1946, p. 141.
  36. ^ a b c d e al-Tabari & Bosworth 1989, p. 326.
  37. ^ a b c Abbott 1946, p. 137.
  38. ^ a b Abbott 1946, p. 138.
  39. ^ al-Sāʿī, Toorawa & Bray 2017, p. 14.
  40. ^ Abbott 1946, pp. 138–39.
  41. ^ al-Tabari & Bosworth 1989, p. 327.
  42. ^ Meadows Of Gold. Taylor & Francis. 2013. p. 462. ISBN 978-1-136-14522-3.
  43. ^ Abbott 1946, pp. 141–42.
  44. ^ Abbott 1946, p. 143.
  45. ^ a b al-Tabari & Bosworth 1989, p. 327.
  46. ^ a b c Abbott 1946, p. 144.
  47. ^ a b al-Tabari & Bosworth 1989, p. 328.
  48. ^ al-Sāʿī, Toorawa & Bray 2017, p. 8.
  49. ^ Abbott 1946, p. 146.
  50. ^ Caswell, Fuad Matthew (2011). The Slave Girls of Baghdad: The Qiyan in the Early Abbasid Era. Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 73–81. ISBN 978-1-78672-959-0.
  51. ^ a b al-Sāʿī, Toorawa & Bray 2017, p. 13.
  52. ^ Abbott 1946, pp. 157.
  53. ^ Abbott 1946, pp. 149–50.
  54. ^ al-Tabari & Bosworth 1989, pp. 327–28.
  55. ^ Al-Masudi, The Meadows of Gold, p. 94.
  56. ^ Bobrick 2012, p. 45.
  57. ^ a b Bobrick 2012, p. 62.
  58. ^ a b Bobrick 2012, p. 61.
  59. ^ Bobrick 2012, p. 42
  60. ^ Bobrick 2012, p. 55.
  61. ^ Bobrick 2012, p. 70.
  62. ^ Bobrick 2012, p. 57.
  63. ^ Bosworth 1995, pp. 385–386.
  64. ^ "Hārūn al-Rashīd | ʿAbbāsid caliph | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 11 December 2021.
  65. ^ "Harun al-Rashid: and the World of the Thousand and One Nights". Youth and Splendour of the Well-Guided One, part 2. André Clot. 2014. ISBN 9780863565588.
  66. ^ "Harun al-Rashid: and the World of the Thousand and One Nights". The Horsemen of Allah, part 1. André Clot. 2014. ISBN 9780863565588.
  67. ^ a b Gabrieli 1960, p. 437.
  68. ^ a b c Rekaya 1991, p. 331.
  69. ^ Bosworth 1993, p. 776.
  70. ^ Masudi 2010, p. 222.
  71. ^ "Alif Laila DVD [20 Disc Set]". Induna.com.
  72. ^ "Yeats Poems Titles". Csun.edu. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  73. ^ . Archived from the original on 8 October 2016. Retrieved 16 March 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  74. ^ Zacny, Rob (24 December 2010). . GamePro. Archived from the original on 6 January 2011.
  75. ^ Levine, Neil (2015). The Urbanism of Frank Lloyd Wright. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691167534.
  76. ^ Caro, Robert (1974). The Power Broker. New York: Vintage Books. p. 444.

Notes edit

  1. ^ 20 more known concubines
  2. ^ First heir-apparent
  3. ^ Second heir-apparent
  4. ^ Al-Qasim was the third heir, however, he was removed by his elder brothers
  5. ^ Al-Ma'mun had made no official provisions for his succession during his reign. According to the account of al-Tabari, on his deathbed al-Ma'mun dictated a letter nominating his brother Abu Ishaq Muhammad as his successor, He was acclaimed as caliph on 9 August, with the regnal title of al-Mu'tasim bi'llah

Sources edit

Further reading edit

  • al-Masudi, The Meadows of Gold, The Abbasids, transl. Paul Lunde and Caroline Stone, Kegan paul, London and New York, 1989
  • al-Tabari "The History of al-Tabari" volume XXX "The 'Abbasid Caliphate in Equilibrium" transl. C.E. Bosworth, SUNY, Albany, 1989.
  • Clot, André (1990). Harun Al-Rashid and the Age of a Thousand and One Nights. New Amsterdam Books. ISBN 0-941533-65-4.
  • St John Philby. Harun al Rashid (London: P. Davies) 1933.
  • Einhard and Notker the Stammerer, "Two Lives of Charlemagne," transl. Lewis Thorpe, Penguin, Harmondsworth, 1977 (1969)
  • John H. Haaren, Famous Men of the Middle Ages [1]
  • William Muir, K.C.S.I., The Caliphate, its rise, decline, and fall [2]
  • Theophanes, "The Chronicle of Theophanes," transl. Harry Turtledove, University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia, 1982
  • Norwich, John J. (1991). Byzantium: The Apogee. Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. ISBN 0-394-53779-3.
  • Zabeth, Hyder Reza (1999). Landmarks of Mashhad. Alhoda UK. ISBN 964-444-221-0.

External links edit

  • Brentjes, Sonja (2007). "Hārūn al-Rashīd". In Thomas Hockey; et al. (eds.). The Biographical Encyclopedia of Astronomers. New York: Springer. pp. 474–5. ISBN 978-0-387-31022-0. (PDF version)
Harun al-Rashid
Born: 763 Died: 809
Sunni Islam titles
Preceded by Caliph of the Abbasid Caliphate
14 September 786 – 24 March 809
Succeeded by

harun, rashid, this, article, about, fifth, abbasid, caliph, other, uses, haroon, rashid, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, re. This article is about fifth Abbasid caliph For other uses see Haroon Rashid This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Harun al Rashid news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Abu Ja far Harun ibn Muhammad al Mahdi Arabic أ ب و ج ع ف ر ه ار ون ٱب ن م ح م د ٱل م ه د ي romanized Abu Ja far Harun ibn Muḥammad al Mahdi or simply Harun ibn al Mahdi Arabic ه ار ون ٱب ن ٱل م ه د ي c 763 or 766 24 March 809 famously known as Harun al Rashid Arabic ه ار ون ٱلر ش يد romanized Harun ar Rashid was the fifth Abbasid caliph of the Abbasid Caliphate reigning from September 786 until his death in March 809 His reign is traditionally regarded to be the beginning of the Islamic Golden Age His epithet al Rashid translates to the Orthodox the Just the Upright or the Rightly Guided Harun al Rashidه ار ون ٱلر ش يدCaliph Commander of the FaithfulGold dinar of Harun al Rashid minted in Baghdad 184 AH 800 801 CE 5th Caliph of the Abbasid CaliphateReign14 September 786 24 March 809PredecessorAl HadiSuccessorAl AminBorn17 March 763 or February 766Ray Jibal Abbasid Caliphate present day Tehran Province Iran Died24 March 809 809 03 24 aged 43 Tus Khorasan Abbasid Caliphate present day Razavi Khorasan Province Iran BurialTomb of Harun al Rashid in Imam Reza Mosque Mashhad IranSpouseZubaidah bint Ja far Azizah bint al Ghitrif Amat al Aziz Ghadir Umm Muhammad bint Salih Abbasa bint Sulayman Jurashiyyah bint Abdallah Umm Abdallah Marajil concubine Maridah bint Shabib concubine Qasif concubine see more a IssueAl Amin b Al Ma mun c Al Qasim d Al Mu tasim e Abdan ibn Harun al Rashid Sukaynah bint Harun al Rashid See more belowNamesHarun al Rashid ibn Muhammad al MahdiDynastyAbbasidFatherAl MahdiMotherAl KhayzuranReligionSunni IslamHarun established the legendary library Bayt al Hikma House of Wisdom in Baghdad in present day Iraq and during his rule Baghdad began to flourish as a world center of knowledge culture and trade 1 During his rule the family of Barmakids which played a deciding role in establishing the Abbasid Caliphate declined gradually In 796 he moved his court and government to Raqqa in present day Syria Domestically Harun pursued policies similar to those of his father Al Mahdi He released many of the Umayyads and Alids his brother Al Hadi had imprisoned and declared amnesty for all political groups of the Quraysh 2 Large scale hostilities broke out with Byzantium and under his rule the Abbasid Empire reached its peak 3 A Frankish mission came to offer Harun friendship in 799 Harun sent various presents with the emissaries on their return to Charlemagne s court including a clock that Charlemagne and his retinue deemed to be a conjuration because of the sounds it emanated and the tricks it displayed every time an hour ticked 4 5 6 Portions of the fictional One Thousand and One Nights are set in Harun s court and some of its stories involve Harun himself 7 Harun s life and court have been the subject of many other tales both factual and fictitious Contents 1 Early life 2 Caliphate 2 1 Advisors 2 2 Diplomacy 2 3 Rebellions 3 Family 4 Anecdotes 5 Death 6 Legacy 7 In popular culture 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Notes 9 3 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksEarly life editHarun was born in Rey then part of Jibal in the Abbasid Caliphate in present day Tehran Province Iran He was the son of al Mahdi the third Abbasid caliph r 775 786 and his wife al Khayzuran a former slave girl from Yemen who was a woman of strong and independent personality who greatly and determinedly influenced affairs of state in the reigns of her husband and sons Growing up Harun studied history geography rhetoric music poetry and economics However most of his time was dedicated to mastering hadith and the Quran In addition he underwent advanced physical education as a future mujahid and as a result he practiced swordplay archery and learned the art of war 8 His birth date is debated with various sources giving dates from 763 to 766 9 Before becoming a caliph in 780 and again in 782 Harun had already nominally led campaigns against the caliphate s traditional enemy the Eastern Roman Empire ruled by Empress Irene The latter expedition was a huge undertaking and even reached the Asian suburbs of Constantinople According to the Muslim chronicler Al Tabari the Byzantines lost tens of thousands of soldiers and Harun employed 20 000 mules to carry the riches back Upon his return to the Abbasid realm the cost of a sword fell to one dirham and the price of a horse to a single gold Byzantine dinar 10 Harun s raids against the Byzantines elevated his political image and once he returned he was given the laqab al Rashid meaning the Rightly Guided One He was promoted to crown prince and given the responsibility of governing the empire s western territories from Syria to Azerbaijan 11 Upon the death of his father in 785 Harun s brother al Hadi became caliph However al Hadi s reign was brief a year and two months Al Hadi clashed with their mother over her great influence in court The historian al Tabari notes varying accounts of al Hadi s death e g an abdominal ulcer or assassination prompted by his own mother Caliphate edit nbsp Map of the Abbasid Caliphate and its provinces c 788On the night of al Hadi s death al Khayzuran quickly released Yahya the Barmakid from prison and ordered him to pay the army s wages send the letters to the governors to pledge allegiance to al Rashid and prepare him as caliph They summoned the commanders of the army Harthama ibn A yan and Khuzayma ibn Khazim and asked them to swear allegiance to Harun as caliph Khuzayma reportedly gathered and armed 5 000 of his own followers dragged the Ja far ibn al Hadi from his bed and forced him to publicly renounce his claims in favour of Harun Harun became caliph in 786 when he was in his early twenties At the time he was tall good looking and slim but strongly built with wavy hair and olive skin 12 On the day of accession his son al Ma mun was born and al Amin some little time later the latter was the son of Zubaida a granddaughter of al Mansur founder of the city of Baghdad so he took precedence over the former whose mother was a Persian Upon his accession Harun led Friday prayers in Baghdad s Great Mosque and then sat publicly as officials and the layman alike lined up to swear allegiance and declare their happiness at his ascent to Amir al Mu minin 13 He began his reign by appointing very able ministers who carried on the work of the government so well that they greatly improved the condition of the people 14 Under Harun al Rashid s rule Baghdad flourished into the most splendid city of its period Tribute paid by many rulers to the caliph funded architecture the arts and court luxuries citation needed In 796 Harun moved the entire court to Raqqa on the middle Euphrates where he spent 12 years most of his reign He appointed the Hanafi jurist Muhammad al Shaybani as qadi judge but dismissed him in 803 He visited Baghdad only once Several reasons may have influenced the decision to move to Raqqa its closeness to the Byzantine border its excellent communication lines via the Euphrates to Baghdad and via the Balikh river to the north and via Palmyra to Damascus rich agricultural land and the strategic advantage over any rebellion which might arise in Syria and the middle Euphrates area Abu al Faraj al Isfahani in his anthology of poems depicts the splendid life in his court In Raqqa the Barmakids managed the fate of the empire and both heirs al Amin and al Ma mun grew up there At some point the royal court relocated again to Al Rayy the capital city of Khorasan where the famous philologist and leader of the Kufan school Al Kisa i accompanied the caliph with his entourage When al Kisa i became ill while in Al Rayy it is said that Harun visited him daily It seems al Shaybani and al Kisa i both died there on the same day in 804 For the administration of the whole empire he fell back on his mentor and longtime associate Yahya bin Khalid bin Barmak Rashid appointed him as his vizier with full executive powers and for seventeen years Yahya and his sons served Rashid faithfully in whatever assignment he entrusted to them 15 Harun made pilgrimages to Mecca by camel 2 820 km or 1 750 mi from Baghdad several times e g 793 795 797 802 and last in 803 Tabari concludes his account of Harun s reign with these words It has been said that when Harun ar Rashid died there were nine hundred million odd dirhams in the state treasury 16 According to Shia belief Harun imprisoned and poisoned Musa ibn Ja far the 7th Imam in Baghdad citation needed Under al Rashid each city had its own law enforcement which besides keeping order was supposed to examine the public markets in order to ensure for instance that proper scales and measures were used enforce the payment of debts and clamp down on illegal activities such as gambling usury and sales of alcohol 17 Harun was a great patron of art and learning and is best known for the unsurpassed splendor of his court and lifestyle Some of the stories perhaps the earliest of The Thousand and One Nights were inspired by the glittering Baghdad court The character King Shahryar whose wife Scheherazade tells the tales may have been based on Harun himself 18 Advisors edit nbsp A silver dirham minted in Madinat al Salam Baghdad in 170 AH 786 CE At the reverse the inner marginal inscription says By order of the slave of God Harun Commander of the Faithful Harun was influenced by the will of his powerful mother in the governance of the empire until her death in 789 When he became caliph Harun allowed her Khayzuran a free hand and at times restrained his own desires out of deference to her expressed wishes and Khayzuran acted as an overseer of affairs and Yahya deferred to her and acted on her advice His vizier chief minister Yahya the Barmakid Yahya s sons especially Ja far ibn Yahya and other Barmakids generally controlled the administration The position of Persians in the Abbasid caliphal court reached its peak during al Rashid s reign 19 The Barmakids were an Iranian family from Balkh that dated back to the Barmak a hereditary Buddhist priest of Nava Vihara who converted after the Islamic conquest of Balkh and became very powerful under al Mahdi Yahya had helped Harun to obtain the caliphate and he and his sons were in high favor until 798 when the caliph threw them in prison and confiscated their land Muhammad ibn Jarir al Tabari dates this event to 803 and lists various reasons for it Yahya s entering the Caliph s presence without permission Yahya s opposition to Muhammad ibn al Layth who later gained Harun s favour and Ja far s release of Yahya ibn Abdallah ibn Hasan whom Harun had imprisoned citation needed The fall of the Barmakids is far more likely due to their behaving in a manner that Harun found disrespectful such as entering his court unannounced and making decisions in matters of state without first consulting him citation needed Al Fadl ibn al Rabi succeeded Yahya the Barmakid as Harun s chief minister citation needed Diplomacy edit nbsp Harun al Rashid at left receiving a delegation sent by Charlemagne to his court in Baghdad 1864 painting by Julius Kockert Both Einhard and Notker the Stammerer refer to envoys traveling between the courts of Harun and Charlemagne king of the Franks and entering friendly discussions about Christian access to holy sites and gift exchanges Notker mentions Charlemagne sent Harun Spanish horses colorful Frisian cloaks and impressive hunting dogs In 802 Harun sent Charlemagne a present consisting of silks brass candelabra perfume balsam ivory chessmen a colossal tent with many colored curtains an elephant named Abul Abbas and a water clock that marked the hours by dropping bronze balls into a bowl as mechanical knights one for each hour emerged from little doors which shut behind them The presents were unprecedented in Western Europe and may have influenced Carolingian art 20 This exchange of embassies was due to the fact that Harun was interested like Charlemagne in subduing the Umayyad emirs of Cordoba Also the common enmity against the Byzantines was what brought Harun closer to the contemporary Charlemagne citation needed When the Byzantine empress Irene was deposed in 802 Nikephoros I became emperor and refused to pay tribute to Harun saying that Irene should have been receiving the tribute the whole time News of this angered Harun who wrote a message on the back of the Byzantine emperor s letter and said In the name of God the most merciful From Amir al Mu minin Harun ar Rashid commander of the faithful to Nikephoros dog of the Romans Thou shalt not hear thou shalt behold my reply After campaigns in Asia Minor Nikephoros was forced to conclude a treaty with humiliating terms 21 22 According to Dr Ahmad Mukhtar al Abadi it is due to the particularly fierce second retribution campaign against Nikephoros that the Byzantine practically ceased any attempt to incite any conflict against the Abbasid again until the rule of Al Ma mun 23 24 An alliance was established with the Chinese Tang dynasty by Ar Rashid after he sent embassies to China 25 26 He was called A lun in the Chinese Tang Annals 27 The alliance was aimed against the Tibetans 28 29 30 31 32 When diplomats and messengers visited Harun in his palace he was screened behind a curtain No visitor or petitioner could speak first interrupt or oppose the caliph They were expected to give their undivided attention to the caliph and calculate their responses with great care 33 Rebellions edit nbsp Dinar of Harun 171 AH AD 787 88 the early years of his reignBecause of the Thousand and One Nights tales Harun al Rashid turned into a legendary figure obscuring his true historic personality In fact his reign initiated the political disintegration of the Abbasid caliphate Syria was inhabited by tribes with Umayyad sympathies and remained the bitter enemy of the Abbasids while Egypt witnessed uprisings against Abbasids due to maladministration and arbitrary taxation The Umayyads had been established in Spain in 755 the Idrisids in Morocco in 788 and the Aghlabids in Ifriqiya modern Tunisia in 800 Besides unrest flared up in Yemen and the Kharijites rose in rebellion in Daylam Kerman Fars and Sistan Revolts also broke out in Khorasan and al Rashid waged many campaigns against the Byzantines citation needed Al Rashid appointed Ali bin Isa bin Mahan as the governor of Khorasan who tried to bring to heel the princes and chieftains of the region and to reimpose the full authority of the central government on them This new policy met with fierce resistance and provoked numerous uprisings in the region citation needed Family editHarun s first wife was Zubaidah She was the daughter of his paternal uncle Ja far and maternal aunt Salsal sister of Al Khayzuran 34 They married in 781 82 at the residence of Muhammad bin Sulayman in Baghdad She had one son Caliph Al Amin 35 She died in 831 36 Another of his wives was Azizah daughter of Ghitrif brother of Al Khayzuran 37 She had been formerly married to Sulayman bin Abi Ja far who had divorced her 36 Another was Amat al Aziz Ghadir who had been formerly a concubine of his brother al Hadi 37 She had one son Ali 35 She died in 789 37 Another wife was Umm Muhammad the daughter of Salih al Miskin and Umm Abdullah the daughter of Isa bin Ali They married in November December 803 in Al Raqqah She had been formerly been married to Ibrahim ibn al Mahdi who had repudiated her 36 Another wife married around the same year was Abbasa daughter of Sulayman ibn Abi Ja far 36 Another wife was Jurashiyyah al Uthmanniyah She was the daughter of Abdullah bin Muhammad and had descended from Uthman the third Caliph of the Rashidun 36 Harun s earliest known concubine was Hailanah She had been a slave girl of Yahya ibn Khalid the Barmakid It was she who begged him while he was yet a prince to take her away from the elderly Yahya Harun then approached Yahya who presented him with the girl She died three years later 38 in 789 90 39 and Harun mourned her deeply 38 Another concubine was Dananir She was a Barmakid and had been formerly a slave girl of Yahya ibn Khalid She had been educated at Medina and had studied instrumental and vocal music 40 Another concubine was Marajil She was a Persian and came from distant Badhaghis in Persia She was one of the ten maids presented to Harun She gave birth to Abdullah future caliph Al Ma mun on the night of Harun s accession to the throne in September 786 in whose birth she died Her son was then adopted by Zubaidah 35 Another concubine was Qasif mother of Al Qasim He was Harun s second son born to a concubine mother Harun s eldest daughter Sukaynah was also born to her 41 Another concubine was Maridah Her father was Shabib 42 She was a Sogdian and was born in Kufah She was one of the ten maids presented to Harun by Zubaidah She had five children These were Abu Ishaq future caliph al Mu tasim Abu Isma il Umm Habib and two others whose names are unknown She was Harun s favourite concubine 43 Some other favourite concubines were Dhat al Khal Sihr and Diya Diya died much to Harun s sorrow 44 Dhat al Khal also known as Khubth 45 was a singer belonging to a slave dealer who was himself a freedman of Abbasah the sister of Al Rashid She caught the fancy of Ibrahim al Mausili whose songs in praise of her soon reached Harun s attention who bought her for the enormous sum of 70 000 dinars 46 She was the mother of Harun s son Abu al Abbas Muhammad 45 46 Sihr was mother of Harun s daughters Khadijah 46 and Karib 47 Another concubine was Inan Her father was Abdullah 48 She was born and brought up in the Yamamah in central Arabia She was a singer and a poet and had been a slave girl of Abu Khalid al Natifi 49 She bore Harun two sons both of whom died young She accompanied him to Khurasan where he and soon after she died 50 Another was Ghadid also known as Musaffa and she was mother of Harun s daughters Hamdunah 51 and Fatimah 47 She was his favourite concubine 51 Hamdunah and Fatimah married Al Hadi s sons Isma il and Ja far respectively 52 Another of Harun s concubines was the captive daughter of a Greek churchman of Heraclea acquired with the fall of that city in 806 Zubaidah once more presented him with one of her personal maids who had caught his fancy Harun s half brother while governor of Egypt from 795 to 797 also sent him an Egyptian maid who immediately won his favour 53 Some other concubines were namely Ri m mother of Salih Irbah mother of Abu Isa Muhammad Sahdhrah mother of Abu Yaqub Muhammad Rawah mother of Abu Sulayman Muhammad Dawaj mother of Abu Ali Muhammad Kitman mother of Abu Ahmad Muhammad Hulab mother of Arwa Irabah mother of Umm al Hassan Sukkar mother of Umm Abiha Rahiq mother of Umm Salamah Khzq mother of Umm al Qasim Haly mother of Umm Ja far Ramlah Aniq mother of Umm Ali Samandal mother of Umm al Ghaliyah Zinah mother of Raytah 54 Anecdotes editMany anecdotes attached themselves to the person of Harun al Rashid in the centuries following his rule Saadi of Shiraz inserted a number of them into his Gulistan Al Masudi relates a number of interesting anecdotes in The Meadows of Gold that illuminate the caliph s character For example he recounts Harun s delight when his horse came in first closely followed by al Ma mun s at a race that Harun held at Raqqa Al Masudi tells the story of Harun setting his poets a challenging task When others failed to please him Miskin of Medina succeeded superbly well The poet then launched into a moving account of how much it had cost him to learn that song Harun laughed and said that he did not know which was more entertaining the song or the story He rewarded the poet 55 There is also the tale of Harun asking Ishaq ibn Ibrahim to keep singing The musician did so until the caliph fell asleep Then strangely a handsome young man appeared snatched the musician s lute sang a very moving piece al Masudi quotes it and left On awakening and being informed of that Harun said Ishaq ibn Ibrahim had received a supernatural visitation Shortly before he died Harun is said to have been reading some lines by Abu al Atahiya about the transitory nature of the power and pleasures of this world an anecdote related to other caliphs as well Every morning Harun gave one thousand dirhams to charity and made one hundred prostrations a day 16 Harun famously used to look up at rain clouds in the sky and said rain where you like but I will get the land tax 56 Harun was terrified for his soul in the afterlife It was reported that he quickly cried when he thought of God and read poems about the briefness of life 57 Soon after he became caliph Harun asked his servant to bring him Ibn al Sammak a renowned scholar to obtain wisdom from him Harun asked al Sammak what he would like to tell him Al Sammak replied I would like you always to remember that one day you will stand alone before your God You will then be consigned either to Heaven or to Hell That was too harsh for Harun s liking and he was obviously disturbed His servant cried out in protest that the Prince of the Faithful will definitely go to heaven after he has ruled justly on earth However al Sammak ignored the interruption and looked straight into the eyes of Harun and said that you will not have this man to defend you on that day 57 An official Maan ibn Zaidah had fallen out of favor with Harun When Harun saw him in court he said that you have grown old The elderly man responded Yes O Commander of the Faithful in your service Harun replied But you have still some energy left The old man replied that what I have is yours to dispose of as you wish and I am bold in opposing your foes Harun was satisfied with the encounter and made the man governor of Basra for his final years 58 On Hajj he distributed large amounts of money to the people of Mecca and Medina and to poor pilgrims en route He always took a number of ascetics with him and whenever he was unable to go on pilgrimage he sent dignitaries and three hundred clerics at his own expense 59 One day Harun was visiting a dignitary when he was struck by his beautiful slave Harun asked the man to give her to him The man obliged but was visibly disturbed by the loss Afterward Harun felt sorry for what he had done and gave her back 60 Harun was an excellent horseman enjoyed hunting with Salukis falcons and hawks and was fond of military exercises such as charging dummies with his sword Harun was also the first Abbasid caliph to have played and promoted chess 61 Harun desired a slave girl that was owned by an official named Isa who refused to give her to Harun despite threats Isa explained that he swore in the middle of a sex act that if he ever gave away or sold her he would divorce his wife free his slaves and give all of his possessions to the impoverished Yusuf a judge and advisor to Harun was called to arbitrate the case and to figure out a legal way for Isa to maintain his belongings even if Harun walked away with the girl Yusuf decided that if Isa gave half of the girl to Harun and sold him the other half it could not be said that Isa had either given her away or sold her keeping his promise 62 Harun had an anxious soul and supposedly was prone to walk the streets of Baghdad at night At times Ja far ibn Yahya accompanied him The night time tours likely arose from a genuine and sympathetic concern in the well being of his people for it is said that he was assiduous to relieve any of their trials and tend to their needs 58 Death editA major revolt led by Rafi ibn al Layth was started in Samarqand which forced Harun al Rashid to move to Khorasan He first removed and arrested Ali bin Isa bin Mahan but the revolt continued unchecked Harun had dismissed Ali and replaced him with Harthama ibn A yan and in 808 marched himself east to deal with the rebel Rafi ibn al Layth but died in March 809 while at Tus 63 64 Harun al Rashid became ill and died very soon after when he reached Sanabad village in Tus and was buried in Dar al Imarah the summer palace of Humayd ibn Qahtaba the Abbasid governor of Khorasan Due to this historical event the Dar al Imarah was known as the Mausoleum of Haruniyyeh The location later became known as Mashhad The Place of Martyrdom because of the martyrdom of Imam al Ridha in 818 Harun al Rashid and his first Heir prince al Amin Al Amin was nominated first heir Al Ma mun second and Al Qasim was third heir After Harun s death in 809 he was succeeded by Al Amin Legacy editAl Rashid become a prominent figure in the Islamic and Arab culture he has been described as one of the most famous Arabs in history All the Abbasid caliphs after him were his descendants About his accession famous poet and musician al Mawsili said Did you not see how the sun came out of hiding on Harun s accession and flooded the world with light 65 About his reign famous Arab historian Al Masudi said So great were the Splendour and riches of his reign such was its prosperity that this period has been called the Honeymoon 66 Al Rashid become the progenitor of subsequent Abbasid caliphs Al Rashid nominated his son Muhammad al Amin as his first heir Muhammad had an elder half brother Abdallah the future al Ma mun r 813 833 who had been born in September 786 six months older than him However Abdallah s mother was a Persian concubine and his pure Abbasid lineage gave Muhammad seniority over his half brother 67 68 Indeed he was the only Abbasid caliph to claim such descent 68 Already in 792 Harun had Muhammad receive the oath of allegiance bay ah with the name of al Amin The Trustworthy effectively marking him out as his main heir while Abdallah was not named second heir under the name al Maʾmun The Trusted One until 799 67 68 and his third son Qasim was nominated third heir however he never became caliph Among his sons al Amin became caliph after his death in 809 Al Amin ruled from 809 to 813 until a civil war broke between him and his brother Abdallah al Ma mun Governor of Khorasan The reason of war were that caliph al Amin tried to remove al Ma mun as his heir Al Ma mun became caliph in 813 and ruled the caliphate for two decades until 833 He was succeeded by another of Harun s son Abu Ishaq Muhammad better known as Al Mu tasim his mother was Marida a concubine 69 70 In popular culture edit nbsp Harun al Rashid as depicted in the Arabian Nights One Thousand and One Nights nbsp Sketch drawing of Harun al Rashid by poet and visual artist Kahlil Gibran 1883 1931 nbsp Harun al Rashid from the book Kitab khizanat al ayyam fi tarajim al ʻizam first published in New york in 1899 nbsp A sketch representation of Harun al Rashid from a book entitled Sayr Mulhimah Min al Sharq wa al Gharb first translated into Arabic and published in Egypt 1381 AH 1961 nbsp Harun al Rashid as depicted in the book Harun Al Rashid 1951 In Shinobu Ohtaka s Magi The Labyrinth of Magic the former king of Balbadd is called Rashid Saluja In the spin off Adventure of Sinbad Rashid s alias is Harun Henry Wadsworth Longfellow wrote a short poem titled Haroun Al Raschid O Henry uses the character in his story The Caliph and the Cad The theme of the story is turning the tables on Haroun al Raschid Alfred Tennyson wrote a poem in his youth entitled Recollections of the Arabian Nights Every stanza except the last one ends with of good Haroun Alraschid Harun al Rashid was a main figure and character in several of the stories in some of the oldest versions of the One Thousand and One Nights The Indian television series Alif Laila 1993 1997 an adaptation of the Arabian Nights features several tales involving the caliph from the classic collection of stories 71 Harun ar Rashid figures throughout James Joyce s Ulysses in a dream of Stephen Dedalus one of the protagonists Stephen s efforts to recall this dream continue throughout the novel culminating in the novel s fifteenth episode wherein some characters also take on the guise of Harun Harun al Rashid is celebrated in a 1923 poem by W B Yeats The Gift of Harun al Rashid 72 73 A story of one of Harun s wanderings provides the climax to the narrative game of titles at the end of Italo Calvino s If on a winter s night a traveler 1979 In Calvino s story Harun wanders at night only to be drawn into a conspiracy in which he is selected to assassinate the Caliph Harun al Rashid In Charles Dickens 1842 travelogue American Notes for General Circulation he compares American supporters of slavery to the Caliph Harun al Rashid in his angry robe of scarlet The two protagonists of Salman Rushdie s 1990 novel Haroun and the Sea of Stories are Haroun and his father Rashid Khalifa In the Sten science fiction novels by Allan Cole and Chris Bunch the character of the Eternal Emperor uses the name H E Raschid when incognito this is confirmed in the final book of the series as a reference to the character from Burton s translation of The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night The movie The Golden Blade 1952 starring Rock Hudson and Piper Laurie depicts the adventures of Harun who uses a magic sword to free a fairy tale Baghdad from Jafar the evil usurper of the throne After he finally wins the hand of princess Khairuzan she awards him the title Al Rashid the righteous The comic book The Sandman features a story issue 50 Ramadan set in the world of the One Thousand and One Nights with Harun ar Rashid as the protagonist It highlights his historical and mythical role as well as his discussion of the transitory nature of power The story is included in the collection The Sandman Fables and Reflections Haroun El Poussah in the French comic strip Iznogoud is a satirical version of Harun ar Rashid In Quest for Glory II the sultan who adopts the Hero as his son is named Harun ar Rashid He is often seen prophesying on the streets of Shapeir as The Poet Omar Harun al Rashid appears as the leader of Arabia in the video game Civilization V 74 Future US President Theodore Roosevelt when he was a commissioner for the New York Police Department was nicknamed Haroun al Roosevelt in several local newspapers In The Master and Margarita by novelist Mikhail Bulgakov Harun al Rashid is referenced by the character Korovyev in which he warns a door man not to judge him by his suit and to reference the story of the famous caliph Harun al Rashid In the 1924 film Waxworks a poet is hired by a wax museum proprietor to write back stories for three wax models Among these wax models is Harun al Rashid played by Emil Jannings In the 2006 novel Variable Star by Robert Heinlein and Spider Robinson chapter 1 is prefaced with a quotation from Alfred Lord Tennyson s Recollections of the Arabian Nights regarding good Harun Alrashid the relevance of which becomes apparent in chapter 2 when one character relates stories probably apocryphal and presumably drawn from Tennyson of Harun al Rahsid to another character in order to use them as an analogy The second chapter in the novel Prince Otto by Robert Louis Stevenson has the title In which the Prince Plays Haroun al Raschid Haroun al Rashid has a character page in the video game Crusader Kings II and it is possible to play as his descendants of the Abbasid dynasty Harun al Rashid appears in the children s comic book Mampato in the stories Bromiznar de Bagdad and Abrete Sesamo by the Chilean author Themo Lobos In this story al Rashid is shown at first as lazy and indolent but after a series of adventures he decides to take the leading role against an evil vizier and help the main character Mampato Frank Lloyd Wright designed a monument to al Rashid as part of his proposed 1957 urban renewal plan for Baghdad Iraq 75 In his book The Power Broker Robert Caro compares New York City mayor Fiorello H La Guardia to Harun al Rashid in the way each roam ed his domain 76 The Syrian television series Harun Al Rashid 2018 starring Kosai Khauli Karis Bashar and Yasser Al Masri focuses on Harun and his relation with his brother Caliph Al Hadi and that preceded Harun s ascent to the Caliphate It also focuses on his relations with his elder sons and nomination of Al Amin and Al Ma mun as heir See also editIsma il ibn Salih ibn Ali al Hashimi Abd al Malik ibn SalihReferences editCitations edit Audun Holme Geometry Our Cultural Heritage p 150 Ghareeb Edmund A Dougherty Beth 18 March 2004 Historical Dictionary of Iraq Scarecrow Press ISBN 9780810865686 Ghareeb Edmund A Dougherty Beth 18 March 2004 Historical Dictionary of Iraq Scarecrow Press ISBN 9780810865686 Andre Clot Harun al Rashid and the world of the thousand and one nights p 97 Royal Frankish Annals DCCCVII Charlemagne Translated sources p 98 Andre Clot Harun al Rashid and the world of the thousand and one nights Bobrick 2012 p 38 Watt William Montgomery 20 March 2022 Harun al Rashid Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 29 April 2022 Bobrick 2012 p 25 Bobrick 2012 p 24 Bobrick 2012 p 37 Bobrick 2012 p 36 New Arabian nights entertainments Volume 3 Masʻudi Paul Lunde Caroline Stone The meadows of gold the Abbasids p 62 a b Bobrick 2012 p 42 Bobrick 2012 p 46 Harun al Rashid the Abbasid Caliph Who Inspired the Arabian Nights ThoughtCo Retrieved 28 June 2022 Hovannisian Richard G Sabagh Georges 1998 The Persian Presence in the Islamic World Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521591850 Lodovico Antonio Muratori Giuseppe Catalani 1742 Annali d Italia Dall anno 601 dell era volare fino all anno 840 Monaco p 465 Muratori describes only some of these gifts Tarikh ath Thabari 4 668 669 Ibn Kathir Al Bidaya wa l Nihaya v 13 p 650 Mukhtar al Abadi Ahmad 2019 In Abbasid and Andalusian History Ain University Library Retrieved 28 September 2021 C E Bosworth 1989 The History of al Tabari Vol 30 The Abbasid Caliphate in Equilibrium The Caliphates of Musa al Hadi and Harun al Rashid A D 785 809 A H 169 193 SUNY Series in Near Eastern Studies Albany New York State University of New York Press p 365 ISBN 978 0 88706 564 4 Retrieved 28 September 2021 Dennis Bloodworth Ching Ping Bloodworth 2004 The Chinese Machiavelli 3000 years of Chinese statecraft Transaction Publishers p 214 ISBN 0 7658 0568 5 Retrieved 28 June 2010 Herbert Allen Giles 1926 Confucianism and its rivals Forgotten Books p 139 ISBN 1 60680 248 8 Retrieved 14 December 2011 Marshall Broomhall 1910 Islam in China a neglected problem London Morgan amp Scott ltd pp 25 26 Retrieved 14 December 2011 Bajpai 2002 p 15 Bajpai 1981 p 55 Chaliand Gerard 1970 Nomadic Empires From Mongolia to the Danube Transaction Publishers Retrieved 1 September 2018 via Google Books Luciano Petech A Study of the Chronicles of Ladakh Calcutta 1939 pp 73 73 Luciano Petech A Study of the Chronicles of Ladakh Calcutta 1939 pp 55 85 Bobrick 2012 p 40 Abbott 1946 pp 29 30 a b c Abbott 1946 p 141 a b c d e al Tabari amp Bosworth 1989 p 326 a b c Abbott 1946 p 137 a b Abbott 1946 p 138 al Saʿi Toorawa amp Bray 2017 p 14 Abbott 1946 pp 138 39 al Tabari amp Bosworth 1989 p 327 Meadows Of Gold Taylor amp Francis 2013 p 462 ISBN 978 1 136 14522 3 Abbott 1946 pp 141 42 Abbott 1946 p 143 a b al Tabari amp Bosworth 1989 p 327 a b c Abbott 1946 p 144 a b al Tabari amp Bosworth 1989 p 328 al Saʿi Toorawa amp Bray 2017 p 8 Abbott 1946 p 146 Caswell Fuad Matthew 2011 The Slave Girls of Baghdad The Qiyan in the Early Abbasid Era Bloomsbury Publishing pp 73 81 ISBN 978 1 78672 959 0 a b al Saʿi Toorawa amp Bray 2017 p 13 Abbott 1946 pp 157 Abbott 1946 pp 149 50 al Tabari amp Bosworth 1989 pp 327 28 Al Masudi The Meadows of Gold p 94 Bobrick 2012 p 45 a b Bobrick 2012 p 62 a b Bobrick 2012 p 61 Bobrick 2012 p 42 Bobrick 2012 p 55 Bobrick 2012 p 70 Bobrick 2012 p 57 Bosworth 1995 pp 385 386 Harun al Rashid ʿAbbasid caliph Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 11 December 2021 Harun al Rashid and the World of the Thousand and One Nights Youth and Splendour of the Well Guided One part 2 Andre Clot 2014 ISBN 9780863565588 Harun al Rashid and the World of the Thousand and One Nights The Horsemen of Allah part 1 Andre Clot 2014 ISBN 9780863565588 a b Gabrieli 1960 p 437 a b c Rekaya 1991 p 331 Bosworth 1993 p 776 Masudi 2010 p 222 Alif Laila DVD 20 Disc Set Induna com Yeats Poems Titles Csun edu Retrieved 1 September 2018 Archived copy Archived from the original on 8 October 2016 Retrieved 16 March 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Zacny Rob 24 December 2010 Civilization V Field Report 2 GamePro Archived from the original on 6 January 2011 Levine Neil 2015 The Urbanism of Frank Lloyd Wright Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691167534 Caro Robert 1974 The Power Broker New York Vintage Books p 444 Notes edit 20 more known concubines First heir apparent Second heir apparent Al Qasim was the third heir however he was removed by his elder brothers Al Ma mun had made no official provisions for his succession during his reign According to the account of al Tabari on his deathbed al Ma mun dictated a letter nominating his brother Abu Ishaq Muhammad as his successor He was acclaimed as caliph on 9 August with the regnal title of al Mu tasim bi llah Sources edit Abbott Nabia 1946 Two Queens of Baghdad Mother and Wife of Harun Al Rashid University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 86356 031 6 al Saʿi Ibn Toorawa Shawkat M Bray Julia 2017 كتاب جهات الأئمة الخلفاء من الحرائر والإماء المسمى نساء الخلفاء Women and the Court of Baghdad Library of Arabic Literature NYU Press ISBN 978 1 4798 6679 3 al Tabari Muhammad Ibn Yarir 1989 The History of al Tabari Vol 30 The Abbasid Caliphate in Equilibrium The Caliphates of Musa al Hadi and Harun al Rashid A D 785 809 A H 169 193 Bibliotheca Persica Translated by C E Bosworth State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 88706 564 4 Bobrick Benson 2012 The Caliph s Splendor Islam and the West in the Golden Age of Baghdad Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 1416567622 Bosworth C E 1995 Rafiʿ b al Layt h b Naṣr b Sayyar In Bosworth C E van Donzel E Heinrichs W P amp Lecomte G eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Volume VIII Ned Sam Leiden E J Brill pp 385 386 ISBN 978 90 04 09834 3 Bosworth C E 1993 al Muʿtaṣim Bi llah In Bosworth C E van Donzel E Heinrichs W P amp Pellat Ch eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Volume VII Mif Naz Leiden E J Brill p 776 ISBN 978 90 04 09419 2 Gabrieli F 1960 al Amin 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 437 438 OCLC 495469456 Masudi 2010 1989 The Meadows of Gold The Abbasids Translated by Paul Lunde and Caroline Stone London and New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 7103 0246 5 Rekaya M 1991 al Maʾmun In Bosworth C E van Donzel E amp Pellat Ch eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Volume VI Mahk Mid Leiden E J Brill pp 331 339 ISBN 978 90 04 08112 3 Further reading edital Masudi The Meadows of Gold The Abbasids transl Paul Lunde and Caroline Stone Kegan paul London and New York 1989 al Tabari The History of al Tabari volume XXX The Abbasid Caliphate in Equilibrium transl C E Bosworth SUNY Albany 1989 Clot Andre 1990 Harun Al Rashid and the Age of a Thousand and One Nights New Amsterdam Books ISBN 0 941533 65 4 St John Philby Harun al Rashid London P Davies 1933 Einhard and Notker the Stammerer Two Lives of Charlemagne transl Lewis Thorpe Penguin Harmondsworth 1977 1969 John H Haaren Famous Men of the Middle Ages 1 William Muir K C S I The Caliphate its rise decline and fall 2 Theophanes The Chronicle of Theophanes transl Harry Turtledove University of Pennsylvania Press Philadelphia 1982 Norwich John J 1991 Byzantium The Apogee Alfred A Knopf Inc ISBN 0 394 53779 3 Zabeth Hyder Reza 1999 Landmarks of Mashhad Alhoda UK ISBN 964 444 221 0 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Harun al Rashid nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Harun al Rashid nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Harun al Rashid Brentjes Sonja 2007 Harun al Rashid In Thomas Hockey et al eds The Biographical Encyclopedia of Astronomers New York Springer pp 474 5 ISBN 978 0 387 31022 0 PDF version Harun al RashidAbbasid dynastyBorn 763 Died 809Sunni Islam titlesPreceded byAl Hadi Caliph of the Abbasid Caliphate14 September 786 24 March 809 Succeeded byAl Amin Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Harun al Rashid amp oldid 1217635397, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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