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Ibad

The ʿIbād or ʿEbād[1] (Arabic: عِباد) were a Christian Arab group within the city of al-Ḥīra (Ḥirtā) during Late Antiquity and the early Middle Ages, when the city was part of the Sasanian Empire and later the Caliphate. Of diverse tribal backgrounds, the ʿIbād were united only by their adherence to Christianity and, after the sixth century, the Church of the East.

Sources edit

Written sources of ʿIbādī history are found in Arabic, Syriac and Greek.[2]

The most extensive sources on the ʿIbād are in Arabic. These tend to focus on kings and poets, and are also concerned with tribal genealogies. From the Abbasid period, they also tend to idealize the pre-Islamic past, the jāhiliyya. An important authority on the ʿIbād in the Arabic tradition is Ḥishām ibn al-Kalbī (d. 819), who consulted ʿIbādī books and archives in al-Ḥīra. He thus passes on something of the ʿIbād's own perception of themselves, their history and their city.[3] His monograph about the ʿIbād is titled The Churches and Monasteries of al-Ḥīra and the Genealogies of the ʿIbādīs.[4] Both al-Ṭabarī and Abuʾl-Faraj use it as their main source on al-Ḥīra.[3]

Oral tradition also informed Arabic historiography. In the twelfth century, Abuʾl-Baqāʾ of al-Ḥilla wrote that the history of the Lakhmid dynasty that had ruled the region before Islam was taught to schoolchildren.[3]

Syriac sources are all ecclesiastical.[3] Their concerns and tendencies are completely different from those of the Arab Islamic historiography. They are concerned only with saints, holy men and clerics and often exaggerate their sufferings.[2]

The archaeology of the region of al-Ḥīra and the study of the architecture of the Church of the East are underexplored and underdeveloped. Although both Arabic and Syriac sources name many churches and monasteries associated with the ʿIbād, none has yet been identified with any existing ruins.[5]

Name and tribal affiliation edit

The Arabic term ʿibād means "servants" or "devotees".[6] It is probably a contraction of the phrase ʿibād al-Rabb ("slaves of the Lord"),[7] ʿibād al-Masīḥ ("slaves of Christ")[7] or ʿibād Allāḥ ("slaves of God").[8] It seems to have been the self-designation of the Christians of al-Ḥīra.[8] Although in later Islamic literature the term usually referred to the Christians of al-Ḥīra exclusively, it may sometimes have been used a synonym for Christians generally, as in the phrase al-ʿIbādiyyūn min Tamīm ("the Christians of Tamīm") found in the Kitāb al-Aghānī of Abuʾl-Faraj,[7] or for Christians of the Church of the East, as when Ibn ʿAsākir (d. 1175) distinguishes between the erstwhile "Jacobite" churches and the "churches of the ʿIbād" in Damascus.[9]

The ʿIbād had diverse tribal backgrounds from both northern Arabia (Tamīm, Rabīʿa and Muḍar) and southern (Azd, Iyād and Lakhm). There were ʿIbād who could trace their genealogy to the Banū ʿAlqama, Banū Ayyūb, Banū Buqayla (Azd), Banū Kaʿb, Banū ʿUqayl and even the Banū Marīna, the same branch as the Lakhmid royal family.[10][11] There were prominent Christians of the Ṭayyiʾ in al-Ḥīra, but it is not clear if they were considered ʿIbād.[11] ʿĀqūlāyē, the Syriac name for the ʿIbād, is derived from the prominent tribe of the Banū ʿUqayl.[10] When Christianity began to spread out from al-Ḥīra into Babylonia, one early Christian settlement was named ʿAqūla after the tribe.[10] Because the ʿIbād were a unity formed out of several tribes, al-Jawharī says, they received their own nisba, a surname usually indicating tribal affiliation: al-ʿIbādī.[11]

Generally, the term ʿIbād seems only to have referred to the established sedentary Christian population of mixed tribal background in al-Ḥīra. The Christians of the nearby semi-nomadic Bedouin tribes were not usually called ʿIbād, nor were Christian newcomers to al-Ḥīra. Abuʾl-Baqāʾ says explicitly that the ʿIbād were "the noble people of al-Ḥīra, the people of the good families" (buyūtāt).[12]

Language and culture edit

The ʿIbād were of considerable antiquity, part of a wider Christian community in southern Mesopotamia and the Sasanian Empire that developed independently of trends within the Roman Empire.[13]

The first language of the ʿIbād was Arabic, but their dress and manners were that of the Aramaic-speaking peasantry of the Sawād (the fertile land of southern Mesopotamia). Later Islamic traditions records that the Arab conquerors of Mesopotamia had some difficulty accepting the ʿIbād as fellow Arabs. One legend has an ʿIbādī referring to his people as both "true Arabs and Arabized Arabs" (ʿarab ʿāriba wa-ʿarab mutaʿarriba), i.e., a mix of southern Qahtanite and northern Adnanites.[14] Another records the legendary ʿIbādī ʿAbd al-Masīḥ ibn Buqayla saying, "we are Nabateanized Arabs and Arabized Nabateans" (ʿarabun stanbaṭnā wa-nabaṭun staʿrabnā). The traditions show that the ʿIbād were accepted as Arabs by other Arabs, largely because their first language was Arabic.[15]

Archaeological excavations suggest that the church architecture of the ʿIbād belonged to the traditions of Mesopotamian architecture and Sasanian architecture with little influence from eastern Roman architecture. This style of church architecture is found throughout Babylonia and the Persian Gulf.[16]

It has been argued that the ʿIbād developed the original Kufic script in pre-Islamic times. Early Islamic tradition, as in the Kitāb al-Aghānī, traces the script back to al-Ḥīra.[17]

History edit

According to Syriac tradition, Christianity was brought to the region of al-Ḥīra by a hermit named ʿAbdīshoʿ in the third century. He is said to have founded the first monastery of al-Ḥīra, probably as a hermitage.[13] By the end of the third century, the encampment of al-Ḥīra had become the capital of the Lakhmids, who turned it into an important trading centre. By the fifth century the dominant group there was the Christians, who called themselves ʿIbād.[6] Abuʾl-Baqāʾ, writing in the twelfth century, says that the ʿIbād "formed the majority" in al-Ḥīra.[12] They had arrived in a series of migrations from eastern Arabia and al-Yamāma in central Arabia.[15]

A bishop of al-Ḥīra, named Hosea, is first attested in the acts of the Council of Seleucia-Ctesiphon in 410. The see was a suffragan of the patriarchal province.[13] In the Council of 484, the Church of the East adopted dyophysitism (Nestorianism), but the doctrine prevailing at al-Ḥīra is uncertain. Monophysite (Jacobite) missionaries were active among the Arab tribes around the city. In the early sixth century, Aḥudemmeh converted the Tanūkh and the Arabs of Kūfa and Simeon of Bēt Arshām was actively proselytizing in al-Ḥīra itself. The Taghlib were also converted to monophysitism and the pagans of the oasis of ʿAyn al-Namir even to Phantasiasm.[18]

The ʿIbād appear to have been doctrinally mixed prior to the late sixth century, when dyophysite influence overwhelmed the monophysite. The closure of the dyophysite School of Nisibis in 540 was a major catalyst, since it was refounded by some former students in al-Ḥīra. Around the same time there seems to have been an exodus of monophysites from al-Ḥīra to Najrān.[19]

During the reign of Khosrow I (531–579) and Bishop Ephrāem, the monastery of Dayr al-Hind al-Kubrā was founded in al-Ḥīra. It is the only monastery the foundation inscription of which has been preserved. It was copied by Ḥishām ibn al-Kalbī. It records that the church was founded by Hind bint al-Ḥārith, wife of the Lakhmid king al-Mundhir III ibn al-Nuʿman (503–554) and mother of King ʿAmr III ibn al-Mundhir (554–570).[20]

Around 592, the Lakhmid king al-Nuʿmān III converted to Nestorianism. According to a legend repeated by Abuʾl-Baqāʾ, the king fell ill and requested the help of both the Yaʿqūbiyya (Jacobites) and the Nasṭūriyyūn (Nestorians). The prayers of the Jacobites failed to heal the king, and the Nestorians demanded that he convert to their faith. This was done in a public ceremony, but nonetheless the archbishop of Mosul and Erbil had to be fetched to perform an exorcism. This story probably represents part of the origin legend of the ʿIbād of Abuʾl-Baqāʾ's day, explaining how the confessional diversity in the city was replaced by uniformity.[19] According to al-Masʿūdī, writing in the tenth century, the ʿIbād were all Nestorians, which meant members of the Church of the East.[18]

In 636, during the Muslim conquest of Persia, the church of al-Ḥīra was razed so Saʿd ibn Abī Waqqāṣ could build his capital of Kūfa.[10] In later Islamic writings, al-Ḥīra became a symbol of the transience of worldly accomplishments. It was a common setting for the orgies and bacchanalia in the khamriyyāt (wine poetry) of the "accursed poets" (shuʿarāʾ al-mujūn) of Kūfa, since the monasteries of al-Ḥīra were associated with drinking and taverns.[21] According to al-Shābushtī, the daughter of al-Nuʿmān III, Hind bint an-Nuʿmān, who had retired to a monastery, met Saʿd ibn Abī Waqqāṣ and Mughīra ibn Shuʿba al-Thaqafī around the time of the conquest and told them how:

In the evening, there was no Arab on earth that did not request favors from us and glorify us, but then in the morning, there was no one from whom we did not request favors and glorify![21]

Notable ʿIbādīs edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Bosworth 2012.
  2. ^ a b Toral-Niehoff 2010, p. 3.
  3. ^ a b c d Toral-Niehoff 2010, p. 2.
  4. ^ Trimingham 1979, p. 196.
  5. ^ Toral-Niehoff 2010, p. 12.
  6. ^ a b Takahashi 2011b.
  7. ^ a b c Trimingham 1979, p. 156.
  8. ^ a b Toral-Niehoff 2010, p. 11.
  9. ^ Takahashi 2011a.
  10. ^ a b c d Trimingham 1979, p. 171.
  11. ^ a b c Toral-Niehoff 2010, p. 4.
  12. ^ a b Toral-Niehoff 2010, p. 5.
  13. ^ a b c Toral-Niehoff 2010, p. 13.
  14. ^ Toral-Niehoff 2010, p. 6.
  15. ^ a b Toral-Niehoff 2010, p. 7.
  16. ^ Toral-Niehoff 2010, pp. 12–13.
  17. ^ Trimingham 1979, pp. 225–228.
  18. ^ a b Toral-Niehoff 2010, pp. 15–16.
  19. ^ a b Toral-Niehoff 2010, p. 17.
  20. ^ Toral-Niehoff 2010, pp. 14–15.
  21. ^ a b Toral-Niehoff 2010, p. 18.

Bibliography edit

  • Bosworth, C. Edmund (2012) [2003]. "Ḥira". Encyclopaedia Iranica. Vol. XII, Fasc. 3. pp. 322–323. Retrieved 10 October 2019.
  • Hainthaler, Theresia (2005). "ʿAdī ibn Zayd al-ʿIbādī, the Pre-Islamic Christian Poet of al-Ḥīrā and His Poem Nr. 3 Written in Jail" (PDF). Parole de l'Orient. 30: 157–172.[permanent dead link]
  • Hainthaler, Theresia (2007). Christliche Araber vor dem Islam: Verbreitung und konfessionelle Zugehörigkeit: eine Hinführung. Leuven: Peeters.
  • Takahashi, Hidemi (2011a). "Damascus". In S. P. Brock; A. M. Butts; G. A. Kiraz; L. Van Rompay (eds.). Gorgias Encyclopedic Dictionary of the Syriac Heritage: Electronic Edition. Gorgias Press. Retrieved 10 October 2019.
  • Takahashi, Hidemi (2011b). "Ḥirta (al-Ḥīra)". In S. P. Brock; A. M. Butts; G. A. Kiraz; L. Van Rompay (eds.). Gorgias Encyclopedic Dictionary of the Syriac Heritage: Electronic Edition. Gorgias Press. Retrieved 10 October 2019.
  • Toral-Niehoff, Isabel (2010). "The ʿIbād of al-Ḥīra: An Arab Christian Community in Late Antique Iraq". In Angelika Neuwirth; Michael Marx; Nicolai Sinai (eds.). The Qurʾān in Context: Entangled Histories and Textual Palimpsests. Leiden: Brill. pp. 323–347 (1–25 in the PDF).
  • Trimingham, J. Spencer (1979). Christianity Among the Arabs in Pre-Islamic Times. London: Longman.
  • Wilmshurst, David (2011). The Martyred Church: A History of the Church of the East. East and West Publishing.
  • Wood, Philip (2016). "Al-Ḥīra and Its Histories". Journal of the American Oriental Society. 136 (4): 785–799.

ibad, this, article, about, christian, community, known, ʿibād, founder, namesake, islam, known, ibāḍ, abdallah, ʿibād, ʿebād, arabic, باد, were, christian, arab, group, within, city, Ḥīra, Ḥirtā, during, late, antiquity, early, middle, ages, when, city, part,. This article is about the Christian community known as ʿIbad For the founder and namesake of Ibadi Islam known as Ibaḍ see Abdallah ibn Ibad The ʿIbad or ʿEbad 1 Arabic ع باد were a Christian Arab group within the city of al Ḥira Ḥirta during Late Antiquity and the early Middle Ages when the city was part of the Sasanian Empire and later the Caliphate Of diverse tribal backgrounds the ʿIbad were united only by their adherence to Christianity and after the sixth century the Church of the East Contents 1 Sources 2 Name and tribal affiliation 3 Language and culture 4 History 5 Notable ʿIbadis 6 Notes 7 BibliographySources editWritten sources of ʿIbadi history are found in Arabic Syriac and Greek 2 The most extensive sources on the ʿIbad are in Arabic These tend to focus on kings and poets and are also concerned with tribal genealogies From the Abbasid period they also tend to idealize the pre Islamic past the jahiliyya An important authority on the ʿIbad in the Arabic tradition is Ḥisham ibn al Kalbi d 819 who consulted ʿIbadi books and archives in al Ḥira He thus passes on something of the ʿIbad s own perception of themselves their history and their city 3 His monograph about the ʿIbad is titled The Churches and Monasteries of al Ḥira and the Genealogies of the ʿIbadis 4 Both al Ṭabari and Abuʾl Faraj use it as their main source on al Ḥira 3 Oral tradition also informed Arabic historiography In the twelfth century Abuʾl Baqaʾ of al Ḥilla wrote that the history of the Lakhmid dynasty that had ruled the region before Islam was taught to schoolchildren 3 Syriac sources are all ecclesiastical 3 Their concerns and tendencies are completely different from those of the Arab Islamic historiography They are concerned only with saints holy men and clerics and often exaggerate their sufferings 2 The archaeology of the region of al Ḥira and the study of the architecture of the Church of the East are underexplored and underdeveloped Although both Arabic and Syriac sources name many churches and monasteries associated with the ʿIbad none has yet been identified with any existing ruins 5 Name and tribal affiliation editThe Arabic term ʿibad means servants or devotees 6 It is probably a contraction of the phrase ʿibad al Rabb slaves of the Lord 7 ʿibad al Masiḥ slaves of Christ 7 or ʿibad Allaḥ slaves of God 8 It seems to have been the self designation of the Christians of al Ḥira 8 Although in later Islamic literature the term usually referred to the Christians of al Ḥira exclusively it may sometimes have been used a synonym for Christians generally as in the phrase al ʿIbadiyyun min Tamim the Christians of Tamim found in the Kitab al Aghani of Abuʾl Faraj 7 or for Christians of the Church of the East as when Ibn ʿAsakir d 1175 distinguishes between the erstwhile Jacobite churches and the churches of the ʿIbad in Damascus 9 The ʿIbad had diverse tribal backgrounds from both northern Arabia Tamim Rabiʿa and Muḍar and southern Azd Iyad and Lakhm There were ʿIbad who could trace their genealogy to the Banu ʿAlqama Banu Ayyub Banu Buqayla Azd Banu Kaʿb Banu ʿUqayl and even the Banu Marina the same branch as the Lakhmid royal family 10 11 There were prominent Christians of the Ṭayyiʾ in al Ḥira but it is not clear if they were considered ʿIbad 11 ʿAqulaye the Syriac name for the ʿIbad is derived from the prominent tribe of the Banu ʿUqayl 10 When Christianity began to spread out from al Ḥira into Babylonia one early Christian settlement was named ʿAqula after the tribe 10 Because the ʿIbad were a unity formed out of several tribes al Jawhari says they received their own nisba a surname usually indicating tribal affiliation al ʿIbadi 11 Generally the term ʿIbad seems only to have referred to the established sedentary Christian population of mixed tribal background in al Ḥira The Christians of the nearby semi nomadic Bedouin tribes were not usually called ʿIbad nor were Christian newcomers to al Ḥira Abuʾl Baqaʾ says explicitly that the ʿIbad were the noble people of al Ḥira the people of the good families buyutat 12 Language and culture editThe ʿIbad were of considerable antiquity part of a wider Christian community in southern Mesopotamia and the Sasanian Empire that developed independently of trends within the Roman Empire 13 The first language of the ʿIbad was Arabic but their dress and manners were that of the Aramaic speaking peasantry of the Sawad the fertile land of southern Mesopotamia Later Islamic traditions records that the Arab conquerors of Mesopotamia had some difficulty accepting the ʿIbad as fellow Arabs One legend has an ʿIbadi referring to his people as both true Arabs and Arabized Arabs ʿarab ʿariba wa ʿarab mutaʿarriba i e a mix of southern Qahtanite and northern Adnanites 14 Another records the legendary ʿIbadi ʿAbd al Masiḥ ibn Buqayla saying we are Nabateanized Arabs and Arabized Nabateans ʿarabun stanbaṭna wa nabaṭun staʿrabna The traditions show that the ʿIbad were accepted as Arabs by other Arabs largely because their first language was Arabic 15 Archaeological excavations suggest that the church architecture of the ʿIbad belonged to the traditions of Mesopotamian architecture and Sasanian architecture with little influence from eastern Roman architecture This style of church architecture is found throughout Babylonia and the Persian Gulf 16 It has been argued that the ʿIbad developed the original Kufic script in pre Islamic times Early Islamic tradition as in the Kitab al Aghani traces the script back to al Ḥira 17 History editAccording to Syriac tradition Christianity was brought to the region of al Ḥira by a hermit named ʿAbdishoʿ in the third century He is said to have founded the first monastery of al Ḥira probably as a hermitage 13 By the end of the third century the encampment of al Ḥira had become the capital of the Lakhmids who turned it into an important trading centre By the fifth century the dominant group there was the Christians who called themselves ʿIbad 6 Abuʾl Baqaʾ writing in the twelfth century says that the ʿIbad formed the majority in al Ḥira 12 They had arrived in a series of migrations from eastern Arabia and al Yamama in central Arabia 15 A bishop of al Ḥira named Hosea is first attested in the acts of the Council of Seleucia Ctesiphon in 410 The see was a suffragan of the patriarchal province 13 In the Council of 484 the Church of the East adopted dyophysitism Nestorianism but the doctrine prevailing at al Ḥira is uncertain Monophysite Jacobite missionaries were active among the Arab tribes around the city In the early sixth century Aḥudemmeh converted the Tanukh and the Arabs of Kufa and Simeon of Bet Arsham was actively proselytizing in al Ḥira itself The Taghlib were also converted to monophysitism and the pagans of the oasis of ʿAyn al Namir even to Phantasiasm 18 The ʿIbad appear to have been doctrinally mixed prior to the late sixth century when dyophysite influence overwhelmed the monophysite The closure of the dyophysite School of Nisibis in 540 was a major catalyst since it was refounded by some former students in al Ḥira Around the same time there seems to have been an exodus of monophysites from al Ḥira to Najran 19 During the reign of Khosrow I 531 579 and Bishop Ephraem the monastery of Dayr al Hind al Kubra was founded in al Ḥira It is the only monastery the foundation inscription of which has been preserved It was copied by Ḥisham ibn al Kalbi It records that the church was founded by Hind bint al Ḥarith wife of the Lakhmid king al Mundhir III ibn al Nuʿman 503 554 and mother of King ʿAmr III ibn al Mundhir 554 570 20 Around 592 the Lakhmid king al Nuʿman III converted to Nestorianism According to a legend repeated by Abuʾl Baqaʾ the king fell ill and requested the help of both the Yaʿqubiyya Jacobites and the Nasṭuriyyun Nestorians The prayers of the Jacobites failed to heal the king and the Nestorians demanded that he convert to their faith This was done in a public ceremony but nonetheless the archbishop of Mosul and Erbil had to be fetched to perform an exorcism This story probably represents part of the origin legend of the ʿIbad of Abuʾl Baqaʾ s day explaining how the confessional diversity in the city was replaced by uniformity 19 According to al Masʿudi writing in the tenth century the ʿIbad were all Nestorians which meant members of the Church of the East 18 In 636 during the Muslim conquest of Persia the church of al Ḥira was razed so Saʿd ibn Abi Waqqaṣ could build his capital of Kufa 10 In later Islamic writings al Ḥira became a symbol of the transience of worldly accomplishments It was a common setting for the orgies and bacchanalia in the khamriyyat wine poetry of the accursed poets shuʿaraʾ al mujun of Kufa since the monasteries of al Ḥira were associated with drinking and taverns 21 According to al Shabushti the daughter of al Nuʿman III Hind bint an Nuʿman who had retired to a monastery met Saʿd ibn Abi Waqqaṣ and Mughira ibn Shuʿba al Thaqafi around the time of the conquest and told them how In the evening there was no Arab on earth that did not request favors from us and glorify us but then in the morning there was no one from whom we did not request favors and glorify 21 Notable ʿIbadis editAws ibn Qallam reigned 363 368 ʿAdi ibn Zayd 6th century Jabir ibn Shamʿun 6th century Shubhalishoʿ fl 780s Ḥunayn ibn Isḥaq al ʿIbadi 809 873 Notes edit Bosworth 2012 a b Toral Niehoff 2010 p 3 a b c d Toral Niehoff 2010 p 2 Trimingham 1979 p 196 Toral Niehoff 2010 p 12 a b Takahashi 2011b a b c Trimingham 1979 p 156 a b Toral Niehoff 2010 p 11 Takahashi 2011a a b c d Trimingham 1979 p 171 a b c Toral Niehoff 2010 p 4 a b Toral Niehoff 2010 p 5 a b c Toral Niehoff 2010 p 13 Toral Niehoff 2010 p 6 a b Toral Niehoff 2010 p 7 Toral Niehoff 2010 pp 12 13 Trimingham 1979 pp 225 228 a b Toral Niehoff 2010 pp 15 16 a b Toral Niehoff 2010 p 17 Toral Niehoff 2010 pp 14 15 a b Toral Niehoff 2010 p 18 Bibliography editBosworth C Edmund 2012 2003 Ḥira Encyclopaedia Iranica Vol XII Fasc 3 pp 322 323 Retrieved 10 October 2019 Hainthaler Theresia 2005 ʿAdi ibn Zayd al ʿIbadi the Pre Islamic Christian Poet of al Ḥira and His Poem Nr 3 Written in Jail PDF Parole de l Orient 30 157 172 permanent dead link Hainthaler Theresia 2007 Christliche Araber vor dem Islam Verbreitung und konfessionelle Zugehorigkeit eine Hinfuhrung Leuven Peeters Takahashi Hidemi 2011a Damascus In S P Brock A M Butts G A Kiraz L Van Rompay eds Gorgias Encyclopedic Dictionary of the Syriac Heritage Electronic Edition Gorgias Press Retrieved 10 October 2019 Takahashi Hidemi 2011b Ḥirta al Ḥira In S P Brock A M Butts G A Kiraz L Van Rompay eds Gorgias Encyclopedic Dictionary of the Syriac Heritage Electronic Edition Gorgias Press Retrieved 10 October 2019 Toral Niehoff Isabel 2010 The ʿIbad of al Ḥira An Arab Christian Community in Late Antique Iraq In Angelika Neuwirth Michael Marx Nicolai Sinai eds The Qurʾan in Context Entangled Histories and Textual Palimpsests Leiden Brill pp 323 347 1 25 in the PDF Trimingham J Spencer 1979 Christianity Among the Arabs in Pre Islamic Times London Longman Wilmshurst David 2011 The Martyred Church A History of the Church of the East East and West Publishing Wood Philip 2016 Al Ḥira and Its Histories Journal of the American Oriental Society 136 4 785 799 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ibad amp oldid 1219237289, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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