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Khalid ibn al-Walid

Khalid ibn al-Walid ibn al-Mughira al-Makhzumi (Arabic: خالد بن الوليد بن المغيرة المخزومي, romanizedKhālid ibn al-Walīd ibn al-Mughīra al-Makhzūmī; died 642) was a 7th-century Arab military commander. He initially headed campaigns against Muhammad on behalf of the Quraysh. He later became a Muslim and spent the remainder of his career in service to Muhammad and the first two Rashidun caliphs: Abu Bakr and Umar. Khalid played the leading command roles in the Ridda Wars against rebel tribes in Arabia in 632–633, the initial campaigns in Sasanian Iraq in 633–634, and the conquest of Byzantine Syria in 634–638.

Khalid ibn al-Walid
خالد بن الوليد
Native name
خالد بن الوليد بن المغيرة المخزومي
Other name(s)
  • Sayf Allah
  • Abu Sulayman
Born6th century CE
Mecca, pre-Islamic Arabia
Died642
Medina or Homs, Rashidun Caliphate
Possible burial place
Allegiance
Service/branchRashidun army
Years of service629–638
Commands held
  • Field commander in Najd and the Yamama (632–633)
  • Supreme commander of Muslim armies in Syria (634–636)
  • Field commander in northern Syria (636–638)
  • Military governor of Qinnasrin (c. 638)
Battles/wars
Spouse(s)
Children
RelationsBanu Makhzum
(a clan of the Quraysh tribe)

As a horseman of the Quraysh's aristocratic Banu Makhzum clan, which ardently opposed Muhammad, Khalid played an instrumental role in defeating Muhammad and his followers during the Battle of Uhud in 625. In 627 or 629, he converted to Islam in the presence of Muhammad, who inducted him as an official military commander among the Muslims and gave him the title of Sayf Allah (lit.'Sword of God'). During the Battle of Mu'ta, Khalid coordinated the safe withdrawal of Muslim troops against the Byzantines. He also led the Bedouins under the Muslim army during the Muslim conquest of Mecca in 629–630 and the Battle of Hunayn in 630. After Muhammad's death, Khalid was appointed to Najd and al-Yamama with the purpose of suppressing or subjugating Arab tribes who were opposed to the nascent Muslim state; this campaign culminated in Khalid's victory over Arab rebel leaders Tulayha and Musaylima at the Battle of Buzakha in 632 and the Battle of Yamama in 633, respectively.

Khalid subsequently moved against the largely Christian Arab tribes and the Sasanian Persian garrisons of the Euphrates valley in Iraq. He was reassigned by Abu Bakr to command the Muslim armies in Syria and he led his men there on an unconventional march across a long, waterless stretch of the Syrian Desert, boosting his reputation as a military strategist. As a result of decisive victories led by Khalid against the Byzantines at Ajnadayn (634), Fahl (634 or 635), Damascus (634–635), and the Yarmouk (636), the Rashidun army conquered most of the Levant. Khalid was subsequently demoted and removed from the army's high command by Umar. Khalid continued service as the key lieutenant of his successor Abu Ubayda ibn al-Jarrah in the sieges of Homs and Aleppo and the Battle of Qinnasrin, all in 637–638. These engagements collectively precipitated the retreat of imperial Byzantine troops from Syria under Emperor Heraclius. Umar then dismissed Khalid from the governorship of Jund Qinnasrin around 638. Khalid died in either Medina or Homs in 642.

He is generally considered by historians to be one of the most seasoned and accomplished generals of the early Islamic era, and he is likewise commemorated throughout the Arab world. Islamic tradition credits Khalid for his battlefield tactics and effective leadership of the early Muslim conquests, but also accuses him of illicitly executing Arab tribesmen who had accepted Islam—namely members of the Banu Jadhima during the lifetime of Muhammad, and Malik ibn Nuwayra during the Ridda Wars—and being responsible for moral and fiscal misconduct in the Levant. Khalid's military fame disturbed some of the pious early Muslims, most notably Umar, who feared it could develop into a personality cult.

Ancestry and early life

Khalid's father was al-Walid ibn al-Mughira, an arbitrator of local disputes in Mecca in the Hejaz (western Arabia).[1] Al-Walid is identified by the historians Ibn Hisham (d. 833), Ibn Durayd (d. 837) and Ibn Habib (d. 859) as the "derider" of the Islamic prophet Muhammad mentioned in the Meccan suras (chapters) of the Qur'an.[1] He belonged to the Banu Makhzum, a leading clan of the Quraysh tribe and Mecca's pre-Islamic aristocracy.[2] The Makhzum are credited for introducing Meccan commerce to foreign markets,[3] particularly Yemen and Abyssinia (Ethiopia),[2] and developed a reputation among the Quraysh for their intellect, nobility and wealth.[3] Their prominence was owed to the leadership of Khalid's paternal grandfather al-Mughira ibn Abd Allah.[3] Khalid's paternal uncle Hisham was known as the 'lord of Mecca' and the date of his death was used by the Quraysh as the start of their calendar.[4] The historian Muhammad Abdulhayy Shaban describes Khalid as "a man of considerable standing" within his clan and Mecca in general.[5]

Khalid's mother was al-Asma bint al-Harith ibn Hazn, commonly known as Lubaba al-Sughra ('Lubaba the Younger', to distinguish her from her elder half-sister Lubaba al-Kubra) of the nomadic Banu Hilal tribe.[6] Lubaba al-Sughra converted to Islam about c. 622 and her paternal half-sister Maymuna became a wife of Muhammad.[6] Through his maternal relations Khalid became highly familiarized with the Bedouin (nomadic Arab) lifestyle.[7]

Genealogical tree of Khalid's clan, the Banu Makhzum
Al-Mughira
Hisham (d. 598)Abu Rabi'aAl-Walid (d. 622)FakihAbu Umayya
Amr (Abu Jahl) (d. 624)Al-Harith (d. 639)Ayyash (d. 636)Al-Walid (d. 620s)HishamKhalid (d. 642)Al-Muhajir (fl. 630–633Umm Salama (d. 680s)Muhammad
Ikrima (d. 634 or 636)Abd al-RahmanAbd AllahIsma'ilAbd al-Rahman (d. 666)Muhajir (d. 657)
SalamaHisham (fl. 691–706)Khalid (fl. 669)Khalid
Ayyub

Early military career

Opposition to Muhammad

 
Map showing troop placements and maneuvers of the Battle of Uhud, where Khalid and his horsemen routed a Muslim force led by the Islamic prophet Muhammad in 625

The Makhzum were strongly opposed to Muhammad, and the clan's preeminent leader Amr ibn Hisham (Abu Jahl), Khalid's first cousin, organized the boycott of Muhammad's clan, the Banu Hashim of Quraysh, in c. 616–618.[1] After Muhammad emigrated from Mecca to Medina in 622, the Makhzum under Abu Jahl commanded the war against him until they were routed at the Battle of Badr in 624.[1] About twenty-five of Khalid's paternal cousins, including Abu Jahl, and numerous other kinsmen were slain in that engagement.[1]

 
Mount Uhud (pictured in 2009) where the battle took place

The following year Khalid commanded the right flank of the cavalry in the Meccan army which confronted Muhammad at the Battle of Uhud north of Medina.[8] According to the historian Donald Routledge Hill, rather than launching a frontal assault against the Muslim lines on the slopes of Mount Uhud, "Khalid adopted the sound tactics" of going around the mountain and bypassing the Muslim flank.[9] He advanced through the Wadi Qanat valley west of Uhud until being checked by Muslim archers south of the valley at Mount Ruma.[9] The Muslims gained the early advantage in the fight, but after most of the Muslim archers abandoned their positions to join the raiding of the Meccans' camp, Khalid charged against the resulting break in the Muslims' rear defensive lines.[8][9] In the ensuing rout, several dozen Muslims were killed.[8] The narratives of the battle describe Khalid riding through the field, slaying the Muslims with his lance.[10] Shaban credits Khalid's "military genius" for the Quraysh's victory at Uhud, the only engagement in which the tribe defeated Muhammad.[11]

In 628 Muhammad and his followers headed for Mecca to perform the umra (lesser pilgrimage to Mecca) and the Quraysh dispatched 200 cavalry to intercept him upon hearing of his departure.[12] Khalid was at the head of the cavalry and Muhammad avoided confronting him by taking an unconventional and difficult alternate route, ultimately reaching Hudaybiyya at the edge of Mecca. Upon realizing Muhammad's change of course, Khalid withdrew to Mecca.[13] A truce between the Muslims and the Quraysh was reached in the Treaty of Hudaybiyya in March.[12]

Conversion to Islam and service under Muhammad

In the year 6 AH (c. 627) or 8 AH (c. 629) Khalid embraced Islam in Muhammad's presence alongside the Qurayshite Amr ibn al-As;[14] the modern historian Michael Lecker comments that the accounts holding that Khalid and Amr converted in 8 AH are "perhaps more trustworthy".[15] The historian Akram Diya Umari holds that Khalid and Amr embraced Islam and relocated to Medina following the Treaty of Hudaybiyya, apparently after the Quraysh dropped demands for the extradition of newer Muslim converts to Mecca.[16] Following his conversion, Khalid "began to devote all his considerable military talents to the support of the new Muslim state", according to the historian Hugh N. Kennedy.[17]

Khalid participated in the expedition to Mu'ta in modern-day Jordan ordered by Muhammad in September 629.[18][19] The purpose of the raid may have been to acquire booty in the wake of the Sasanian Persian army's retreat from Syria following its defeat by the Byzantine Empire in July.[20] The Muslim detachment was routed by a Byzantine force consisting mostly of Arab tribesmen led by the Byzantine commander Theodore and several high-ranking Muslim commanders were slain.[20][21] Khalid took command of the army following the deaths of the appointed commanders and, with considerable difficulty, oversaw a safe withdrawal of the Muslims.[19][22] Muhammad rewarded Khalid by bestowing on him the honorary title Sayf Allah ('the Sword of God').[22][a]

 
The oasis town of Dumat al-Jandal (pictured in 2007). Khalid led an expedition against the city in 630, and may have led another expedition in 633 or 634, though modern historians have cast doubt about the latter campaign or Khalid's role in it.

In December 629 or January 630, Khalid took part in Muhammad's capture of Mecca, after which most of the Quraysh converted to Islam.[1] In that engagement Khalid led a nomadic contingent called muhajirat al-arab ('the Bedouin emigrants').[7] He led one of the two main pushes into the city and in the subsequent fighting with the Quraysh, three of his men were killed while twelve Qurayshites were slain, according to Ibn Ishaq, the 8th-century biographer of Muhammad.[24] Khalid commanded the Bedouin Banu Sulaym in the Muslims' vanguard at the Battle of Hunayn later that year. In that confrontation, the Muslims, boosted by the influx of Qurayshite converts, defeated the Thaqif—the Ta'if-based traditional rivals of the Quraysh—and their nomadic Hawazin allies.[7] Khalid was then appointed to destroy the idol of al-Uzza, one of the goddesses worshiped in pre-Islamic Arabian religion, in the Nakhla area between Mecca and Ta'if.[18]

Khalid was afterward dispatched to invite to Islam the Banu Jadhima in Yalamlam, about 80 kilometers (50 mi) south of Mecca, but the Islamic traditional sources hold that he attacked the tribe illicitly.[18] In the version of Ibn Ishaq, Khalid had persuaded the Jadhima tribesmen to disarm and embrace Islam, which he followed up by executing a number of the tribesmen in revenge for the Jadhima's slaying of his uncle Fakih ibn al-Mughira dating to before Khalid's conversion to Islam. In the narrative of Ibn Hajar al-Asqalani (d. 1449), Khalid misunderstood the tribesmen's acceptance of the faith as a rejection or denigration of Islam due to his unfamiliarity with the Jadhima's accent and consequently attacked them. In both versions Muhammad declared himself innocent of Khalid's action but did not discharge or punish him.[25] According to the historian W. Montgomery Watt, the traditional account about the Jadhima incident "is hardly more than a circumstantial denigration of Khālid, and yields little solid historical fact".[26]

Later in 630, while Muhammad was at Tabuk, he dispatched Khalid to capture the oasis market town of Dumat al-Jandal.[18] Khalid gained its surrender and imposed a heavy penalty on the inhabitants of the town, one of whose chiefs, the Kindite Ukaydir ibn Abd al-Malik al-Sakuni, was ordered by Khalid to sign the capitulation treaty with Muhammad in Medina.[27] In June 631 Khalid was sent by Muhammad at the head of 480 men to invite the mixed Christian and polytheistic Balharith tribe of Najran to embrace Islam.[28] The tribe converted and Khalid instructed them in the Qur'an and Islamic laws before returning to Muhammad in Medina with a Balharith delegation.[28]

Commander in the Ridda wars

 
Map of Khalid's campaigns against the Arab tribes of Najd and the Yamama, both in central Arabia, during the Ridda wars. The itinerary of his campaign is indicated by dashed, red arrows. The territory of the early Muslim state, comprising Mecca, Medina and Ta'if and their environs, is shaded in green

After Muhammad's death in June 632, one of his early and close companions, Abu Bakr, became caliph (leader of the Muslim community). The issue of succession had caused discord among the Muslims.[29] The Ansar (lit.'Helpers'), the natives of Medina who hosted Muhammad after his emigration from Mecca, attempted to elect their own leader.[30] Opinion was split among the Muhajirun (lit.'Emigrants'), the mostly Qurayshite natives of Mecca who emigrated with Muhammad to Medina. One group advocated for a companion closer in kinship to Muhammad, namely his cousin Ali, while another group, backed by new converts among the Qurayshite aristocracy, rallied behind Abu Bakr. The latter, with the key intervention of the prominent Muhajirun, Umar ibn al-Khattab and Abu Ubayda ibn al-Jarrah, overrode the Ansar and acceded.[29] Khalid was a staunch supporter of Abu Bakr's succession.[31] A report preserved in a work by the 13th-century scholar Ibn Abi'l-Hadid claims that Khalid was a partisan of Abu Bakr, opposed Ali's candidacy, and declared that Abu Bakr was "not a man about whom one needs [to] enquire, and his character needs not be sounded out".[31]

Most tribes in Arabia, except those inhabiting the environs of Mecca, Medina and Ta'if discontinued their allegiance to the nascent Muslim state after Muhammad's death or had never established formal relations with Medina.[32] Islamic historiography describes Abu Bakr's efforts to establish or reestablish Islamic rule over the tribes as the Ridda wars (wars against the 'apostates'). Views of the wars by modern historians vary considerably. Watt agrees with the Islamic characterization of the tribal opposition as anti-Islamic in nature, while Julius Wellhausen and C. H. Becker hold the tribes were opposed to the tax obligations to Medina rather than Islam as a religion. In the view of Leone Caetani and Bernard Lewis, the opposing tribes who had established ties with Medina regarded their religious and fiscal obligations as being a personal contract with Muhammad; their attempts to negotiate different terms after his death were rejected by Abu Bakr, who proceeded to launch the campaigns against them.[33]

Of the six main conflict zones in Arabia during the Ridda wars, two were centered in Najd (the central Arabian plateau): the rebellion of the Asad, Tayy and Ghatafan tribes under Tulayha and the rebellion of the Tamim tribe led by Sajah; both leaders claimed to be prophets.[34][35] After Abu Bakr quashed the threat to Medina by the Ghatafan at the Battle of Dhu al-Qassa,[36] he dispatched Khalid against the rebel tribes in Najd.[37][b] Khalid was Abu Bakr's third nominee to lead the campaign after his first two choices, Zayd ibn al-Khattab and Abu Hudhayfa ibn Utba, refused the assignment.[39] His forces were drawn from the Muhajirun and the Ansar.[39] Throughout the campaign, Khalid demonstrated considerable operational independence and did not stringently abide by the caliph's directives.[40] In the words of Shaban, "he simply defeated whoever was there to be defeated".[40]

Battle of Buzakha

Khalid's initial focus was the suppression of Tulayha's following.[35] In late 632, he confronted Tulayha's forces at the Battle of Buzakha, which took place at the eponymous well in Asad territory where the tribes were encamped. The Tayy defected to the Muslims before Khalid's troops arrived to Buzakha, the result of mediation between the two sides by the Tayy chief Adi ibn Hatim. The latter had been assigned by Medina as its tax collector over his tribe and its traditional Asad rivals.[41]

Khalid bested the Asad–Ghatafan forces in battle.[42] When Tulayha appeared close to defeat, the Fazara section of the Ghatafan under their chief Uyayna ibn Hisn deserted the field, compelling Tulayha to flee for Syria.[43] His tribe, the Asad, subsequently submitted to Khalid, followed by the hitherto neutral Banu Amir, which had awaited the results of the conflict before giving its allegiance to either side.[43] Uyayna was captured and brought to Medina.[42] As a result of the victory at Buzakha, the Muslims gained control over most of Najd.[44]

Execution of Malik ibn Nuwayra

After Buzakha, Khalid proceeded against the rebel Tamimite chieftain Malik ibn Nuwayra headquartered in al-Butah, in the present-day Qassim region.[39] Malik had been appointed by Muhammad as the collector of the sadaqa ('alms tax') over his clan of the Tamim, the Yarbu, but stopped forwarding this tax to Medina after Muhammad's death.[45] Abu Bakr consequently resolved to have him executed by Khalid.[45] The latter faced divisions within his army regarding this campaign, with the Ansar initially staying behind, citing instructions by Abu Bakr not to campaign further until receiving a direct order by the caliph.[46] Khalid claimed such an order was his prerogative as the commander appointed by the caliph, but he did not force the Ansar to participate and continued his march with troops from the Muhajirun and the Bedouin defectors from Buzakha and its aftermath; the Ansar ultimately rejoined Khalid after internal deliberations.[46]

According to the most common account in the Muslim traditional sources, Khalid's army encountered Malik and eleven of his clansmen from the Yarbu in 632. The Yarbu did not resist, proclaimed their Muslim faith and were escorted to Khalid's camp. Khalid had them all executed over the objection of an Ansarite, who had been among the captors of the tribesmen and argued for the captives' inviolability due to their testaments as Muslims. Afterward, Khalid married Malik's widow Umm Tamim bint al-Minhal. When news of Khalid's actions reached Medina, Umar, who had become Abu Bakr's chief aide, pressed for Khalid to be punished or relieved of command, but Abu Bakr pardoned him.[45]

According to the account of the 8th-century historian Sayf ibn Umar, Malik had also been cooperating with the prophetess Sajah, his kinswoman from the Yarbu, but after they were defeated by rival clans from the Tamim, left her cause and retreated to his camp at al-Butah. There, he was encountered with his small party by the Muslims.[47] The modern historian Wilferd Madelung discounts Sayf's version, asserting that Umar and other Muslims would not have protested Khalid's execution of Malik if the latter had left Islam,[48] while Watt considers accounts about the Tamim during the Ridda in general to be "obscure ... partly because the enemies of Khālid b. al-Walīd have twisted the stories to blacken him".[49] In the view of the modern historian Ella Landau-Tasseron, "the truth behind Malik's career and death will remain buried under a heap of conflicting traditions".[47]

Elimination of Musaylima and conquest of the Yamama

 
Map of the Yamama region, shaded in red. The region was conquered by Khalid from the Banu Hanifa tribe led by Musaylima

Following a series of setbacks in her conflict with rival Tamim factions, Sajah joined the strongest opponent of the Muslims: Musaylima, the leader of the sedentary Banu Hanifa tribe in the Yamama,[35][37] the agricultural eastern borderlands of Najd.[50] Musaylima had laid claims to prophet-hood before Muhammad's emigration from Mecca, and his entreaties for Muhammad to mutually recognize his divine revelation were rejected by Muhammad.[51] After Muhammad died, support for Musaylima surged in the Yamama,[52] whose strategic value lay not only with its abundance of wheat fields and date palms, but also its location connecting Medina to the regions of Bahrayn and Oman in eastern Arabia.[53] Abu Bakr had dispatched Shurahbil ibn Hasana and Khalid's cousin Ikrima with an army to reinforce the Muslim governor in the Yamama, Musaylima's tribal kinsman Thumama ibn Uthal.[54] According to the modern historian Meir Jacob Kister, it was likely the threat posed by this army which compelled Musaylima to forge an alliance with Sajah.[55] Ikrima was repelled by Musaylima's forces and thereafter instructed by Abu Bakr to quell rebellions in Oman and Mahra (central southern Arabia) while Shurahbil was to remain in the Yamama in expectation of Khalid's large army.[56]

After his victories against the Bedouin of Najd, Khalid headed to the Yamama with warnings of the Hanifa's military prowess and instructions by Abu Bakr to act severely toward the tribe should he be victorious.[57] The 12th-century historian Ibn Hubaysh al-Asadi holds that the armies of Khalid and Musaylima respectively stood at 4,500 and 4,000. Kister dismisses the much larger figures cited by most of the early Muslim sources as exaggerations.[58] Khalid's first three assaults against Musaylima at the plain of Aqraba were beaten back.[58] The strength of Musaylima's warriors, the superiority of their swords and the fickleness of the Bedouin contingents in Khalid's ranks were all reasons cited by the Muslims for their initial failures.[58] Khalid heeded the counsel of the Ansarite Thabit ibn Qays to exclude the Bedouins from the next fight.[59]

In the fourth assault against the Hanifa, the Muhajirun under Khalid and the Ansar under Thabit killed a lieutenant of Musaylima, who subsequently fled with part of his army.[59] The Muslims pursued the Hanifa to a large enclosed garden which Musaylima used to stage a last stand against the Muslims.[59] The enclosure was stormed by the Muslims, Musaylima was slain and most of the Hanifites were killed or wounded.[59] The enclosure became known as the 'garden of death' for the high casualties suffered by both sides.[35]

Khalid assigned a Hanifite taken captive early in the campaign, Mujja'a ibn al-Murara, to assess the strength, morale and intentions of the Hanifa in their Yamama fortresses in the aftermath of Musaylima's slaying.[37][60] Mujja'a had the women and children of the tribe dress and pose as men at the openings of the forts in a ruse to boost their leverage with Khalid;[37] he relayed to Khalid that the Hanifa still counted numerous warriors determined to continue the fight against the Muslims.[60] This assessment, along with the exhaustion of his own troops, compelled Khalid to accept Mujja'a's counsel for a ceasefire with the Hanifa, despite Abu Bakr's directives to pursue retreating Hanifites and execute Hanifite prisoners of war.[60]

Khalid's terms with the Hanifa entailed the tribe's conversion to Islam and the surrender of their arms and armor and stockpiles of gold and silver.[60] Abu Bakr ratified the treaty, though he remained opposed to Khalid's concessions and warned that the Hanifa would remain eternally faithful to Musaylima.[60] The treaty was further consecrated by Khalid's marriage to Mujja'a's daughter. According to Lecker, Mujja'a's ruse may have been invented by the Islamic tradition "in order to protect Khalid's policy because the negotiated treaty ... caused the Muslims great losses".[37] Khalid was allotted an orchard and a field in each village included in the treaty with the Hanifa, while the villages excluded from the treaty were subject to punitive measures.[7] Among these villages were Musaylima's hometown al-Haddar and Mar'at, whose inhabitants were expelled or enslaved and the villages resettled with tribesmen from clans of the Tamim.[7][61]

Conclusion of the Ridda wars

The traditional sources place the final suppression of the Arab tribes of the Ridda wars before March 633, though Caetani insists the campaigns must have continued into 634.[35] The tribes in Bahrayn may have resisted the Muslims until the middle of 634. A number of the early Islamic sources ascribe a role for Khalid on the Bahrayn front after his victory over the Hanifa. Shoufani deems this improbable, while allowing the possibility that Khalid had earlier sent detachments from his army to reinforce the main Muslim commander in Bahrayn, al-Ala al-Hadhrami.[62]

The Muslim war efforts, in which Khalid played a vital part, secured Medina's dominance over the strong tribes of Arabia, which sought to diminish Islamic authority in the peninsula, and restored the nascent Muslim state's prestige.[7] According to Lecker, Khalid and the other Qurayshite generals "gained precious experience [during the Ridda wars] in mobilizing large multi-tribal armies over long distances" and "benefited from the close acquaintance of the Kuraysh [sic] with tribal politics throughout Arabia".[7]

Campaigns in Iraq

 
Map detailing Khalid's campaigns in Sasanian Iraq (lower Mesopotamia), based on the general outlines of the Islamic tradition

With the Yamama pacified, Khalid marched northward toward Sasanian territory in Iraq (lower Mesopotamia).[63][64] He reorganized his army, possibly because the bulk of the Muhajirun may have withdrawn to Medina.[65] According to the historian Khalil Athamina, the remnants of Khalid's army consisted of nomadic Arabs from Medina's environs whose chiefs were appointed to replace the vacant command posts left by the sahaba ('companions' of Muhammad).[65] The historian Fred Donner holds that the Muhajirun and the Ansar still formed the core of his army, along with a large proportion of nomadic Arabs likely from the Muzayna, Tayy, Tamim, Asad and Ghatafan tribes.[66] The commanders of the tribal contingents appointed by Khalid were Adi ibn Hatim of the Tayy and Asim ibn Amr of the Tamim.[67] He arrived at the southern Iraqi frontier with about 1,000 warriors in the late spring or early summer of 633.[68]

The focus of Khalid's offensive was the western banks of the Euphrates river and the nomadic Arabs who dwelt there.[69] The details of the campaign's itinerary are inconsistent in the early Muslim sources, though Donner asserts that "the general course of Khalid's progress in the first part of his campaigning in Iraq can be quite clearly traced".[70] The 9th-century histories of al-Baladhuri and Khalifa ibn Khayyat hold Khalid's first major battle in Iraq was his victory over the Sasanian garrison at Ubulla (the ancient Apologos, near modern Basra) and the nearby village of Khurayba, though al-Tabari (d. 923) considers attribution of the victory to Khalid as erroneous and that Ubulla was conquered later by Utba ibn Ghazwan al-Mazini.[70] Donner accepts the town's conquest by Utba "somewhat later than 634" is the more likely scenario, though the historian Khalid Yahya Blankinship argues "Khālid at least may have led a raid there although [Utbah] actually reduced the area".[71]

From Ubulla's vicinity, Khalid marched up the western bank of the Euphrates where he clashed with the small Sasanian garrisons who guarded the Iraqi frontier from nomadic incursions.[70] The clashes occurred at Dhat al-Salasil, Nahr al-Mar'a (a canal connecting the Euphrates with the Tigris immediately north of Ubulla), Madhar (a town several days north of Ubulla), Ullays (likely the ancient trade center of Vologesias) and Walaja.[70] The last two places were in the vicinity of al-Hira, a predominantly Arab market town and the Sasanian administrative center for the middle Euphrates valley.[70]

Al-Hira's capture was the most significant gain of Khalid's campaign.[70] After besting the city's Persian cavalry under the commander Azadhbih in minor clashes, Khalid and part of his army entered the unwalled city.[72][73] Al-Hira's Arab tribal nobles, many of whom were Nestorian Christians with blood ties to the nomadic tribes on the city's western desert fringes, barricaded in their scattered fortified palaces.[74] In the meantime, the other part of Khalid's army harried the villages in al-Hira's orbit, many of which were captured or capitulated on tributary terms with the Muslims.[72] The Arab nobility of al-Hira surrendered in an agreement with Khalid whereby the city paid a tribute in return for assurances that al-Hira's churches and palaces would not be disturbed.[72][73] The annual sum to be paid by al-Hira amounted to 60,000 or 90,000 silver dirhams,[75][76] which Khalid forwarded to Medina, marking the first tribute the Caliphate received from Iraq.[73]

During the engagements in and around al-Hira, Khalid received key assistance from al-Muthanna ibn Haritha and his Shayban tribe, who had been raiding this frontier for a considerable period before Khalid's arrival, though it is not clear if al-Muthanna's earlier activities were linked to the nascent Muslim state.[77] After Khalid departed, he left al-Muthanna in practical control of al-Hira and its vicinity.[78] He received similar assistance from the Sadus clan of the Dhuhl tribe under Qutba ibn Qatada and the Ijl tribe under al-Madh'ur ibn Adi during the engagements at Ubulla and Walaja.[79] None of these tribes, all of which were branches of the Banu Bakr confederation, joined Khalid when he operated outside of their tribal areas.[80]

Khalid continued northward along the Euphrates valley, attacking Anbar on the east bank of the river, where he secured capitulation terms from its Sasanian commander.[72] Afterward, he plundered the surrounding market villages frequented by tribesmen from the Bakr and Quda'a confederations, before moving against Ayn al-Tamr, an oasis town west of the Euphrates and about 90 kilometers (56 mi) south of Anbar.[72] Khalid encountered stiff resistance there by the tribesmen of the Namir, compelling him to besiege the town's fortress.[72] The Namir were led by Hilal ibn Aqqa, a Christian chieftain allied with the Sasanians, who Khalid had crucified after defeating him.[81] Ayn al-Tamr capitulated and Khalid captured the town of Sandawda to the north.[72] By this stage, Khalid had subjugated the western areas of the lower Euphrates and the nomadic tribes, including the Namir, Taghlib, Iyad, Taymallat and most of the Ijl, as well as the settled Arab tribesmen, which resided there.[82]

Modern assessments

Athamina doubts the Islamic traditional narrative that Abu Bakr directed Khalid to launch a campaign in Iraq, citing Abu Bakr's disinterest in Iraq at a time when the Muslim state's energies were focused principally on the conquest of Syria.[83] Unlike Syria, Iraq had not been the focus of Muhammad's or the early Muslims' ambitions, nor did the Quraysh maintain trading interests in the region dating to the pre-Islamic period as they had in Syria.[84] According to Shaban, it is unclear if Khalid requested or received Abu Bakr's sanction to raid Iraq or ignored objections by the caliph.[40] Athamina notes hints in the traditional sources that Khalid initiated the campaign unilaterally, implying that the return of the Muhajirun in Khalid's ranks to Medina following Musaylima's defeat likely represented their protest of Khalid's ambitions in Iraq.[85] Shaban holds that the tribesmen who remained in Khalid's army were motivated by the prospect of war booty, particularly amid an economic crisis in Arabia which had arisen in the aftermath of the Ridda campaigns.[40]

According to Fred Donner, the subjugation of Arab tribes may have been Khalid's primary goal in Iraq and clashes with Persian troops were the inevitable, if incidental, result of the tribes' alignment with the Sasanian Empire.[82] In Kennedy's view, Khalid's push toward the desert frontier of Iraq was "a natural continuation of his work" subduing the tribes of northeastern Arabia and in line with Medina's policy to bring all nomadic Arab tribes under its authority.[68] Madelung asserts Abu Bakr relied on the Qurayshite aristocracy during the Ridda wars and early Muslim conquests and speculates that the caliph dispatched Khalid to Iraq to allot the Makhzum an interest in that region.[86]

The extent of Khalid's role in the conquest of Iraq is disputed by modern historians.[87] Patricia Crone argues it is unlikely Khalid played any role on the Iraqi front, citing seeming contradictions by contemporary, non-Arabic sources,[88] namely the Armenian chronicle of Sebeos (c. 661) and the Khuzistan Chronicle (c. 680).[18] The former only records Arab armies being sent to conquer Iraq as the Muslim conquest of Syria was already underway—as opposed to before as held by the traditional Islamic sources—while the latter mentions Khalid as the conqueror of Syria only.[88] Crone views the traditional reports as part of a general theme in the largely Iraq-based, Abbasid-era (post-750) sources to diminish the early Muslims' focus on Syria in favor of Iraq.[18] Crone's assessment is considered a "radical critique of the [traditional] sources" by R. Stephen Humphreys,[89] while Khalid Yahya Blankinship calls it "too one-sided ... The fact that Khālid is a major hero in the historical traditions of Iraq certainly suggests ties there that can have come only from his early participation in its conquest".[87]

March to Syria

All early Islamic accounts agree that Khalid was ordered by Abu Bakr to leave Iraq for Syria to support Muslim forces already present there. Most of these accounts hold that the caliph's order was prompted by requests for reinforcements by the Muslim commanders in Syria.[90] Khalid likely began his march to Syria in early April 634.[91] He left small Muslim garrisons in the conquered cities of Iraq under the overall military command of al-Muthanna ibn Haritha.[92]

The chronological sequence of events after Khalid's operations in Ayn al-Tamr is inconsistent and confused.[93] According to Donner, Khalid undertook two further principal operations before embarking on his march to Syria, which have often been conflated by the sources with events that occurred during the march. One of the operations was against Dumat al-Jandal and the other against the Namir and Taghlib tribes present along the western banks of the upper Euphrates valley as far as the Balikh tributary and the Jabal al-Bishri mountains northeast of Palmyra.[93] It is unclear which engagement occurred first, though both were Muslim efforts to bring the mostly nomadic Arab tribes of north Arabia and the Syrian steppe under Medina's control.[93]

In the Dumat al-Jandal campaign, Khalid was instructed by Abu Bakr or requested by one of the commanders of the campaign, al-Walid ibn Uqba, to reinforce the lead commander Iyad ibn Ghanm's faltering siege of the oasis town. Its defenders were backed by their nomadic allies from the Byzantine-confederate tribes, the Ghassanids, Tanukhids, Salihids, Bahra and Banu Kalb.[94] Khalid left Ayn al-Tamr for Dumat al-Jandal where the combined Muslim forces bested the defenders in a pitched battle.[94] Afterward, Khalid executed the town's Kindite leader Ukaydir, who had defected from Medina following Muhammad's death, while the Kalbite chief Wadi'a was spared after the intercession of his Tamimite allies in the Muslims' camp.[95]

The historians Michael Jan de Goeje and Caetani dismiss altogether that Khalid led an expedition to Dumat al-Jandal following his Iraqi campaign and that the city mentioned in the traditional sources was likely the town by the same name near al-Hira.[27] The historian Laura Veccia Vaglieri calls their assessment "logical" and writes that "it seems impossible that Khālid could have made such a detour which would have taken him so far out of his way while delaying the accomplishment of his mission [to join the Muslim armies in Syria]".[27] Vaglieri surmises that the oasis was conquered by Iyad ibn Ghanm or possibly Amr ibn al-As as the latter had been previously tasked during the Ridda wars with suppressing Wadi'a, who had barricaded himself in Dumat al-Jandal.[27] Crone, dismissing Khalid's role in Iraq entirely, asserts that Khalid had definitively captured Dumat al-Jandal in the 631 campaign and from there crossed the desert to engage in the Syrian conquest.[18]

Itineraries and the desert march

 
A map showing three general itineraries of Khalid's march to Syria from Iraq around April 634, as summarized by the historian Fred Donner. The 'desert march' portion of the itineraries are indicated in red.

The starting point of Khalid's general march to Syria was al-Hira, according to most of the traditional accounts, with the exception of al-Baladhuri, who places it at Ayn al-Tamr.[96] The segment of the general march called the 'desert march' by the sources occurred at an unclear stage after the al-Hira departure.[97] This phase entailed Khalid and his men—numbering between 500 to 800 strong[98]—marching from a well called Quraqir across a vast stretch of waterless desert for six days and five nights until reaching a source of water at a place called Suwa.[99] As his men did not possess sufficient waterskins to traverse this distance with their horses and camels, Khalid had some twenty of his camels increase their typical water intake and sealed their mouths to prevent the camels from eating and consequently spoiling the water in their stomachs; each day of the march, he had a number of the camels slaughtered so his men could drink the water stored in the camels' stomachs.[98][100] The utilization of the camels as water storage and the locating of the water source at Suwa were the result of advice given to Khalid by his guide, Rafi ibn Amr of the Tayy.[98][101]

Excluding the above-mentioned operations in Dumat al-Jandal and the upper Euphrates valley, the traditional accounts agree on only two events of Khalid's route to Syria after the departure from al-Hira: the desert march between Quraqir and Suwa, and a subsequent raid against the Bahra tribe at or near Suwa and operations which resulted in the submission of Palmyra; otherwise, they diverge in tracing Khalid's itinerary.[102] Based on these accounts, Donner summarizes three possible routes taken by Khalid to the vicinity of Damascus: two via Palmyra from the north and the one via Dumat al-Jandal from the south.[97] Kennedy notes the sources are "equally certain" in their advocacy of their respective itineraries and there is "simply no knowing which version is correct".[98]

In the first Palmyra–Damascus itinerary, Khalid marches upwards along the Euphrates—passing through places he had previously reduced—to Jabal al-Bishri and from there successively moves southwestwards through Palmyra, al-Qaryatayn and Huwwarin before reaching the Damascus area.[101] In this route the only span where a desert march could have occurred is between Jabal al-Bishri and Palmyra, though the area between the two places is considerably less than a six-day march and contains a number of water sources.[101] The second Palmyra-Damascus itinerary is a relatively direct route between al-Hira to Palmyra via Ayn al-Tamr.[101] The stretch of desert between Ayn al-Tamr and Palmyra is long enough to corroborate a six-day march and contains scarce watering points, though there are no placenames that can be interpreted as Quraqir or Suwa.[103] In the Dumat al-Jandal–Damascus route, such placenames exist, namely the sites of Qulban Qurajir, associated with 'Quraqir', along the eastern edge of Wadi Sirhan, and Sab Biyar, which is identified with Suwa 150 kilometers (93 mi) east of Damascus.[103] The span between the two sites is arid and corresponds with the six-day march narrative.[103]

The desert march is the most celebrated episode of Khalid's expedition and medieval Futuh ('Islamic conquests') literature in general.[99] Kennedy writes that the desert march "has been enshrined in history and legend. Arab sources marvelled at his [Khalid's] endurance; modern scholars have seen him as a master of strategy."[98] He asserts it is "certain" Khalid embarked on the march, "a memorable feat of military endurance", and "his arrival in Syria was an important ingredient of the success of Muslim arms there".[98] The historian Moshe Gil calls the march "a feat which has no parallel" and a testament to "Khalid's qualities as an outstanding commander".[104]

The historian Ryan J. Lynch deems Khalid's desert march to be a literary construct by the authors of the Islamic tradition to form a narrative linking the Muslim conquests of Iraq and Syria and presenting the conquests as "a well-calculated, singular affair" in line with the authors' alleged polemical motives.[105] Lynch holds that the story of the march, which "would have excited and entertained" Muslim audiences, was created out of "fragments of social memory" by inhabitants who attributed the conquests of their towns or areas to Khalid as a means "to earn a certain degree of prestige through association" with the "famous general".[105]

Conquest of Syria

Most traditional accounts have the first Muslim armies deploy to Syria from Medina at the beginning of 13 AH (early spring 634).[106] The commanders of the Muslim armies were Amr ibn al-As, Yazid ibn Abi Sufyan, Shurahbil ibn Hasana and Abu Ubayda ibn al-Jarrah,[107] though the last may have not deployed to Syria until after Umar's succession to the caliphate in the summer of 634, following Abu Bakr's death.[108] According to Donner, the traditional sources' dating of the first Muslim armies' deployment to Syria was behind by several months. It most likely occurred in the autumn of 633, which better conforms with the anonymous Syriac Chronicle of 724, which dates the first clash between the Muslim armies and the Byzantines to February 634.[109] By the time Khalid had left Iraq, the Muslim armies in Syria had already fought a number of skirmishes with local Byzantine garrisons and dominated the southern Syrian countryside, but did not control any urban centers.[110]

Khalid was appointed supreme commander of the Muslim armies in Syria.[65] Accounts cited by al-Baladhuri, al-Tabari, Ibn A'tham, al-Fasawi (d. 987) and Ibn Hubaysh al-Asadi hold that Abu Bakr appointed Khalid supreme commander as part of his reassignment from Iraq to Syria, citing the general's military talents and record.[111] A single account in al-Baladhuri instead attributes Khalid's appointment to a consensus among the commanders already in Syria, though Athamina asserts "it is inconceivable that a man like [Amr ibn al-As] would agree" to such a decision voluntarily.[112] Upon his accession, Umar may have confirmed Khalid as supreme commander.[113]

Khalid reached the meadow of Marj Rahit north of Damascus after his army's trek across the desert.[114] He arrived on Easter day of that year, i.e. 24 April 634,[106][115] a rare precise date cited by most traditional sources, which Donner deems to be likely correct.[91] There, Khalid attacked a group of Ghassanids celebrating Easter before he or his subordinate commanders raided the Ghouta agricultural belt around Damascus.[116] Afterward, Khalid and the commanders of the earlier Muslim armies, except for Amr, assembled at Bosra southeast of Damascus.[116] The trading center of Bosra, along with the Hauran region in which it lies, had historically supplied the nomadic tribes of Arabia with wheat, oil and wine and had been visited by Muhammad during his youth.[115] The Byzantines may not have reestablished an imperial garrison in the city in the aftermath of the Sasanian withdrawal in 628 and the Muslim armies encountered token resistance during their siege.[115] Bosra capitulated in late May 634, making it the first major city in Syria to fall to the Muslims.[117][118]

Khalid and the Muslim commanders headed west to Palestine to join Amr as the latter's subordinates in the Battle of Ajnadayn, the first major confrontation with the Byzantines, in July.[119][120] The battle ended in a decisive victory for the Muslims and the Byzantines retreated toward Pella ('Fahl' in Arabic), a major city east of the Jordan River.[119][120] The Muslims pursued them and scored another major victory at the Battle of Fahl, though it is unclear if Amr or Khalid held overall command in the engagement.[121]

Siege of Damascus

 
Muslim and Byzantine troop movements in Syria before the battle of Yarmouk in 636.

The remnants of the Byzantine forces from Ajnadayn and Fahl retreated north to Damascus, where the Byzantine commanders called for imperial reinforcements.[122] Khalid advanced,[122] possibly besting a Byzantine unit at the Marj al-Suffar plain before besieging the city.[123] Each of the five Muslim commanders were charged with blocking one of the city gates; Khalid was stationed at Bab Sharqi (the East Gate).[122][124] A sixth contingent positioned at Barzeh immediately north of Damascus repulsed relief troops dispatched by the Byzantine emperor Heraclius (r. 575–641).[122][124]

Several traditions relate the Muslims' capture of Damascus.[123] The most popular narrative is preserved by the Damascus-based Ibn Asakir (d. 1175), according to whom Khalid and his men breached the Bab Sharqi gate.[123] Khalid and his men scaled the city's eastern walls and killed the guards and other defenders at Bab Sharqi.[125] As his forces entered from the east, Muslim forces led by Abu Ubayda had entered peacefully from the western Bab al-Jabiya gate after negotiations with Damascene notables led by Mansur ibn Sarjun, a high-ranking city official.[123][126] The Muslim armies met up in the city center where capitulation terms were agreed.[126] On the other hand, al-Baladhuri holds that Khalid entered peacefully from Bab Sharqi while Abu Ubayda entered from the west by force.[123] Modern research questions Abu Ubayda's arrival in Syria by the time of the siege. Caetani cast doubt about the aforementioned traditions, while the orientalist Henri Lammens substituted Abu Ubayda with Yazid ibn Abi Sufyan.[127]

In the versions of the Syriac author Dionysius of Tel Mahre (d. 845) and the Melkite patriarch Eutychius of Alexandria (d. 940), the Damascenes led by Mansur, having become weary of the siege and convinced of the besiegers' determination, approached Khalid at Bab Sharqi with an offer to open the gate in return for assurances of safety. Khalid accepted and ordered the drafting of a capitulation agreement.[128] Although several versions of Khalid's treaty were recorded in the early Muslim and Christian sources,[c] they generally concur that the inhabitants' lives, properties and churches were to be safeguarded, in return for their payment of the jizya (poll tax).[130] Imperial properties were confiscated by the Muslims.[126][131] The treaty probably served as the model for the capitulation agreements made throughout Syria, as well Iraq and Egypt, during the early Muslim conquests.[130][d]

Although the accounts cited by al-Waqidi (d. 823) and Ibn Ishaq agree that Damascus surrendered in August/September 635, they provide varying timelines of the siege ranging from four to fourteen months.[133][122]

Battle of Yarmouk

 
The ravines of the Yarmouk River, in the vicinity of the Battle of Yarmouk

In the spring of 636, Khalid withdrew his forces from Damascus to the old Ghassanid capital at Jabiya in the Golan.[123] He was prompted by the approach of a large Byzantine army dispatched by Heraclius,[123] consisting of imperial troops led by Vahan and Theodore Trithyrius and frontier troops, including Christian Arab light cavalry led by the Ghassanid phylarch Jabala ibn al-Ayham and Armenian auxiliaries led by a certain Georgius (called Jaraja by the Arabs).[134][135] The sizes of the forces are disputed by modern historians; Donner holds the Byzantines outnumbered the Muslims four to one,[136] Walter E. Kaegi writes the Byzantines "probably enjoyed numerical superiority" with 15,000–20,000 or more troops,[134] and John Walter Jandora holds there was likely "near parity in numbers" between the two sides with the Muslims at 36,000 men (including 10,000 from Khalid's army) and the Byzantines at about 40,000.[137]

The Byzantine army set up camp at the Ruqqad tributary west of the Muslims' positions at Jabiya.[136] Khalid consequently withdrew, taking up position north of the Yarmouk River,[138] close to where the Ruqqad meets the Yarmouk.[139] The area spanned high hilltops, water sources, critical routes connecting Damascus to the Galilee and historic pastures of the Ghassanids.[139] For over a month, the Muslims held the strategic high ground between Adhri'at (modern Daraa) and their camp near Dayr Ayyub and bested the Byzantines in a skirmish outside Jabiya on 23 July 636.[134] Jandora asserts that the Byzantines' Christian Arab and Armenian auxiliaries deserted or defected, but that the Byzantine force remained "formidable", consisting of a vanguard of heavy cavalry and a rear guard of infantrymen when they approached the Muslim defensive lines.[140]

 
Illustration of the Battle of Yarmouk by an anonymous Catalan illustrator (c. 1310–1325).

Khalid split his cavalry into two main groups, each positioned behind the Muslims' right and left infantry wings to protect his forces from a potential envelopment by the Byzantine heavy cavalry.[140] He stationed an elite squadron of 200–300 horsemen to support the center of his defensive line and left archers posted in the Muslims' camp near Dayr Ayyub, where they could be most effective against an incoming Byzantine force.[140] The Byzantines' initial assaults against the Muslims' right and left flanks successively failed, but they kept up the momentum until the entire Muslim line fell back or, as contemporary Christian sources maintain, feigned retreat.[140]

The Byzantines pursued the Muslims into their camp, where the Muslims had their camel herds hobbled to form a series of defensive perimeters from which the infantry could fight and which Byzantine cavalries could not easily penetrate.[141] As a result, the Byzantines were left vulnerable to attack by Muslim archers, their momentum was halted and their left flank exposed.[140] Khalid and his cavalries used the opportunity to pierce the Byzantines' left flank, taking advantage of the gap between the Byzantine infantry and cavalry.[134][142][143] Khalid enveloped the opposing heavy cavalry on either side, but intentionally left an opening from which the Byzantines could only escape northward, far from their infantry.[143] According to the 9th-century Byzantine historian Theophanes, the Byzantine infantry mutinied under Vahan, possibly in light of Theodore's failure to counter the attack on the cavalry. The infantry was subsequently routed.[144]

The Byzantine cavalry, meanwhile, had withdrawn north to the area between the Ruqqad and Allan tributaries.[134] Khalid sent a force to pursue and prevent them from regrouping.[140] He followed up with a nighttime operation in which he seized the Ruqqad bridge, the only viable withdrawal route for the Byzantines.[134] The Muslims then assaulted the Byzantines' camps on 20 August and massacred most of the Byzantine troops,[134] or induced panic in Byzantine ranks, causing thousands to die in the Yarmouk's ravines in an attempt to make a westward retreat.[145]

Jandora credits the Muslim victory at Yarmouk to the cohesion and "superior leadership" of the Muslim army, particularly the "ingenuity" of Khalid, in comparison to the widespread discord in the Byzantine army's ranks and the conventional tactics of Theodorus, which Khalid "correctly anticipated".[146] In Gil's view, Khalid's withdrawal before the army of Heraclius, the evacuation of Damascus and the counter-movement on the Yarmouk tributaries "are evidence of his excellent organising ability and his skill at manoeuvring on the battlefield".[104] The Byzantine rout marked the destruction of their last effective army in Syria, immediately securing earlier Muslim gains in Palestine and Transjordan and paving the way for the recapture of Damascus[134] in December, this time by Abu Ubayda,[131] and the conquest of the Beqaa Valley and ultimately the rest of Syria to the north.[134] In Jandora's assessment, Yarmouk was one of "the most important battles of World History", ultimately leading to Muslim victories which expanded the Caliphate between the Pyrenees mountains and Central Asia.[147]

Demotion

Khalid was retained as supreme commander of the Muslim forces in Syria between six months and two years from the start of Umar's caliphate, depending on the source.[148] Modern historians mostly agree that Umar's dismissal of Khalid probably occurred in the aftermath of Yarmouk.[149] The caliph appointed Abu Ubayda to Khalid's place, reassigned his troops to the remaining Muslim commanders and subordinated Khalid under the command of one of Abu Ubayda's lieutenants; a later order deployed the bulk of Khalid's former troops to Iraq.[150] Varied causes for Khalid's dismissal from the supreme command are cited by the early Islamic sources.[151] Among them were his independent decision-making and minimal coordination with the leadership in Medina; older allegations of moral misconduct, including his execution of Malik ibn Nuwayra and subsequent marriage to Malik's widow; accusations of generous distribution of booty to members of the tribal nobility to the detriment of eligible early Muslim converts; personal animosity between Khalid and Umar; and Umar's uneasiness over Khalid's heroic reputation among the Muslims, which he feared could develop into a personality cult.[152]

The modern historians De Goeje, William Muir and Andreas Stratos viewed Umar's enmity with Khalid as a contributing cause of Khalid's dismissal. Shaban acknowledges the enmity but asserts it had no bearing on the caliph's decision.[148] De Goeje dismisses Khalid's extravagant grants to the tribal nobility, a common practice among the early Muslim leaders including Muhammad, as a cause for his sacking.[148] Muir, Becker, Stratos and Philip K. Hitti have proposed that Khalid was ultimately dismissed because the Muslim gains in Syria in the aftermath of Yarmouk required the replacement of a military commander at the helm with a capable administrator such as Abu Ubayda.[151]

Athamina doubts all the aforementioned reasons, arguing the cause "must have been vital" at a time when large parts of Syria remained under Byzantine control and Heraclius had not abandoned the province.[153] Athamina holds that "with all his military limitations", Abu Ubayda would not have been considered "a worthy replacement for Khālid's incomparable talents".[153] Medina's lack of a regular standing army, the need to redeploy fighters to other fronts, and the Byzantine threat to Muslim gains in Syria all required the establishment of a defense structure based on the older-established Arab tribes in Syria, which had served as confederates of Byzantium. After Medina's entreaties to the leading confederates, the Ghassanids, were rebuffed, relations were established with the Kalb, Judham and Lakhm.[154] These tribes likely considered the large numbers of outside Arab tribesmen in Khalid's army as a threat to their political and economic power.[155] Khalid's initial force of 500–800 men had swelled to as high as 10,000 as a result of tribesmen joining his army's ranks from the Iraqi front or Arabia and as high as 30,000–40,000 factoring in their families.[156] Athamina concludes Umar dismissed Khalid and recalled his troops from Syria as an overture to the Kalb and their allies.[157]

Operations in northern Syria

Abu Ubayda and Khalid proceeded from Damascus northward to Homs (called Emesa by the Byzantines) and besieged the city probably in the winter of 636–637.[158] The siege held amid a number of sorties by the Byzantine defenders and the city capitulated in the spring.[158] Per the surrender terms, taxes were imposed on the inhabitants in return for guarantees of protection for their property, churches, water mills and the city walls.[159] A quarter of the church of St. John was reserved for Muslim use, and abandoned houses and gardens were confiscated and distributed by Abu Ubayda or Khalid among the Muslim troops and their families.[159] Owing to its proximity to the desert steppe, Homs was viewed as a favorable place of settlement for Arab tribesmen and became the first city in Syria to acquire a large Muslim population.[159]

Information about the subsequent conquests in northern Syria is scant and partly contradictory.[160] Khalid was dispatched by Abu Ubayda to conquer Qinnasrin (called Chalcis by the Byzantines) and nearby Aleppo.[161] Khalid routed a Byzantine force led by a certain Minas in the outskirts of Qinnasrin.[161][162] There, Khalid spared the inhabitants following their appeal and claim that they were Arabs forcibly conscripted by the Byzantines.[162] He followed up by besieging the walled town of Qinnasrin,[163] which capitulated in August/September 638.[164] He and Iyad ibn Ghanm then launched the first Muslim raid into Byzantine Anatolia.[165] Khalid made Qinnasrin his headquarters, settling there with his wife.[163] Khalid was appointed Abu Ubayda's deputy governor in Qinnasrin in 638.[166] The campaigns against Homs and Qinnasrin resulted in the conquest of northwestern Syria and prompted Heraclius to abandon his headquarters at Edessa for Samosata in Anatolia and ultimately to the imperial capital of Constantinople.[167]

Khalid may have participated in the siege of Jerusalem, which capitulated in 637 or 638.[168] According to al-Tabari, he was one of the witnesses of a letter of assurance by Umar to Patriarch Sophronius of Jerusalem guaranteeing the safety of the city's people and property.[169]

Dismissal and death

According to Sayf ibn Umar, later in 638 Khalid was rumored to have lavishly distributed war spoils from his northern Syrian campaigns, including a sum to the Kindite nobleman al-Ash'ath ibn Qays.[170] Umar consequently ordered that Abu Ubayda publicly interrogate and relieve Khalid from his post regardless of the interrogation's outcome, as well as to put Qinnasrin under Abu Ubayda's direct administration.[171] Following his interrogation in Homs, Khalid issued successive farewell speeches to the troops in Qinnasrin and Homs before being summoned by Umar to Medina.[172] Sayf's account notes that Umar sent notice to the Muslim garrisons in Syria and Iraq that Khalid was dismissed not as a result of improprieties but because the troops had become "captivated by illusions on account of him [Khalid]" and he feared they would disproportionately place their trust in him rather than God.[173]

Khalid's sacking did not elicit public backlash, possibly due to existing awareness in the Muslim polity of Umar's enmity toward Khalid, which prepared the public for his dismissal, or because of existing hostility toward the Makhzum in general as a result of their earlier opposition to Muhammad and the early Muslims.[174] In the account of Ibn Asakir, Umar declared at a council of the Muslim army at Jabiya in 638 that Khalid was dismissed for lavishing war spoils on war heroes, tribal nobles and poets instead of reserving the sums for needy Muslims.[150] No attending commanders voiced opposition, except for a Makhzumite who accused Umar of violating the military mandate given to Khalid by Muhammad.[175] According to the Muslim jurist al-Zuhri (d. 742), before his death in 639, Abu Ubayda appointed Khalid and Iyad ibn Ghanm as his successors,[176] but Umar confirmed only Iyad as governor of the Homs–Qinnasrin–Jazira district and appointed Yazid ibn Abi Sufyan governor over the rest of Syria, namely the districts of Damascus, Jordan and Palestine.[177]

Khalid died in Medina or Homs in 21 AH (c. 642 CE).[178][179] Purported hadiths related about Khalid include Muhammad's urgings to Muslims not to harm Khalid and prophecies that Khalid would be dealt injustices despite his tremendous contributions to Islam.[180] In Islamic literary narratives, Umar expresses remorse over dismissing Khalid and the women of Medina mourn his death en masse.[180] Athamina considers these all to be "no more than latter-day expressions of sympathy on the part of subsequent generations for the heroic character of Khalid as portrayed by Islamic tradition".[180]

Legacy

Khalid is credited by the early sources for being the most effective commander of the conquests, including after his dismissal from the supreme command.[181] He is considered "one of the tactical geniuses of the early Islamic period" by Donner.[110] The historian Carole Hillenbrand calls him "the most famous of all Arab Muslim generals",[182] and Humphreys describes him as "perhaps the most famous and brilliant Arab general of the Riddah wars and the early conquests".[89] In Kennedy's assessment, Khalid was "a brilliant, ruthless military commander, but one with whom the more pious Muslims could never feel entirely comfortable".[183] While recognizing his military achievements, the early Islamic sources present a mixed assessment of Khalid due to his early confrontation with Muhammad at Uhud, his reputation for brutal or disproportionate actions against Arab tribesmen during the Ridda wars and his military fame which disturbed the pious early converts.[17]

According to the historian Richard Blackburn, despite attempts in the early sources to discredit Khalid, his reputation has developed as "Islam's most formidable warrior" during the eras of Muhammad, Abu Bakr and the conquest of Syria.[179] Kennedy notes that "his reputation as a great general has lasted through the generations and streets are named after him all over the Arab world".[17] Khalid is considered a war hero by Sunni Muslims, while many Shia Muslims view him as a war criminal for his execution of Malik ibn Nuwayra and immediate marriage of his widow, in contravention of the traditional Islamic bereavement period.[184]

Family and claimants of descent

 
Since at least the 12th century, Khalid's tomb has been purported to be located in the present-day Khalid ibn al-Walid Mosque in Homs, Syria
 
The purported tomb of Khalid within the Khalid ibn al-Walid Mosque

Khalid's eldest son was named Sulayman, hence his kunya ('paedonymic') Abu Sulayman ('father of Sulayman').[185] Khalid was married to Asma, a daughter of Anas ibn Mudrik, a prominent chieftain and poet of the Khath'am tribe.[186] Their son Abd al-Rahman became a reputable commander in the Arab–Byzantine wars and a close aide of Mu'awiya ibn Abi Sufyan, the governor of Syria and later founder and first caliph of the Umayyad Caliphate, serving as the latter's deputy governor of the Homs–Qinnasrin–Jazira district.[187][188] Another son of Khalid, Muhajir, was a supporter of Ali, who reigned as caliph in 656–661, and died fighting Mu'awiya's army at the Battle of Siffin in 657 during the First Muslim Civil War.[187] Following Abd al-Rahman's death in 666, allegedly as a result of poisoning ordered by Mu'awiya, Muhajir's son Khalid attempted to take revenge for his uncle's slaying and was arrested, but Mu'awiya later released him after Khalid paid the blood money.[189] Abd al-Rahman's son Khalid was a commander of a naval campaign against the Byzantines in 668 or 669.[18][190]

There is no further significant role played by members of Khalid's family in the historical record.[18] His male line of descent ended toward the collapse of the Umayyad Caliphate in 750 or shortly after when all forty of his male descendants died in a plague in Syria, according to the 11th-century historian Ibn Hazm.[187] As a result, his family's properties, including his residence and several other houses in Medina, were inherited by Ayyub ibn Salama, a great-grandson of Khalid's brother al-Walid ibn al-Walid. They remained in the possession of Ayyub's descendants until at least the late 9th century.[191][e]

The family of the 12th-century Arab poet Ibn al-Qaysarani claimed descent from Muhajir ibn Khalid, though the 13th-century historian Ibn Khallikan notes the claim contradicted the consensus of Arabic historians and genealogists that Khalid's line of descent terminated in the early Islamic period.[194] A female line of descent may have survived and was claimed by the 15th-century Sufi religious leader Siraj al-Din Muhammad ibn Ali al-Makhzumi of Homs.[195] Kizil Ahmed Bey, the leader of the Isfendiyarids, who ruled a principality in Anatolia until its annexation by the Ottomans, fabricated his dynasty's descent from Khalid.[196] The Sur tribe under Sher Shah, a 16th-century ruler of India, also claimed descent from Khalid.[197]

Mausoleum in Homs

Starting in the Ayyubid period in Syria (1182–1260), Homs has obtained fame as the location of the purported tomb and mosque of Khalid.[198] The 12th-century traveler Ibn Jubayr noted that the tomb contained the graves of Khalid and his son Abd al-Rahman.[179] Muslim tradition since then has placed Khalid's tomb in the city.[179] The building was altered by the first Ayyubid sultan Saladin (r. 1171–1193) and again in the 13th century.[198] The Mamluk sultan Baybars (r. 1260–1277) attempted to link his own military achievements with those of Khalid by having an inscription honoring himself carved on Khalid's mausoleum in Homs in 1266.[182] During his 17th-century visit to the mausoleum, the Muslim scholar Abd al-Ghani al-Nabulsi agreed that Khalid was buried there but also noted an alternative Islamic tradition that the grave belonged to Mu'awiya's grandson Khalid ibn Yazid.[198] The current mosque dates to 1908 when the Ottoman authorities rebuilt the structure.[179][199]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The time and place that Khalid gained the epithet Sayf Allah ('the Sword of God') varies in the Islamic sources. Historians of the 8th and early 9th centuries indicate the title was awarded to Khalid by Caliph Abu Bakr (r. 632–634) for his successes in the Ridda wars against the tribes of Arabia opposed to the Muslim state. In the mid-to-late 9th century, the first reports began to circulate in Islamic histories that Muhammad awarded the title to Khalid for his role against the Byzantines at the Battle of Mu'ta.[23]
  2. ^ Abu Bakr had previously dispatched the bulk of the Muslim army, under Usama ibn Zayd, to attack Byzantine Syria, despite threats to the Muslim towns of the Hejaz by nomadic tribes which had discarded Muslim authority.[35][37] The historian Elias Shoufani contends that Usama's expedition was a much smaller force than had been originally planned by the Islamic prophet Muhammad and doubts its ranks comprised most of the Ansar, Muhajirun, and the Bedouin tribesmen of the Mecca and Medina areas; rather, it probably consisted mainly of poorer, brigand-types among the Muslims who depended on booty from raids for sustenance.[38] Lecker holds that Khalid was deployed against the tribes in Najd before the return of Usama's army,[37] while Watt notes Khalid was sent with a large army after Usama's return.[35]
  3. ^ Most of the Muslim accounts are traced to the prominent 8th-century jurist of Syria, al-Awza'i, and among the Muslim historians, the Damascus-based Ibn Asakir devotes the most attention to it, recording six versions of the text. The earliest Christian accounts of the treaty were recorded by the Syriac author Dionysius of Tel Mahre and the Melkite patriarch Eutychius of Alexandria.[129]
  4. ^ The Muslim forces entered similar agreements with nearly all the cities they besieged in Syria, including Tiberias, Beisan, Homs, Aleppo, Jerusalem, as well as Alexandria in Egypt and the cities of Upper Mesopotamia.[132]
  5. ^ Following his conversion to Islam, Khalid was granted a plot of land by the Islamic prophet Muhammad immediately east of the Prophet's Mosque in Medina to build his house, which was completed before Muhammad's death.[192] It was a small plot, a result of his relatively late conversion (most available plots had already been granted to earlier converts), but after complaining of the size, Khalid was permitted by Muhammad to build higher than the other houses in Medina.[193] Khalid declared his house a charitable endowment, prohibiting his descendants from selling or passing ownership of it.[193] In the 12th century, Kamal al-Din Muhammad al-Shahrazuri, the head qadi (Islamic judge) of the Zengid dynasty in Syria, purchased and converted Khalid's house in Medina into a ribat ('charitable house' or 'hospice') for men.[193]

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Further reading

khalid, walid, mughira, makhzumi, arabic, خالد, بن, الوليد, بن, المغيرة, المخزومي, romanized, khālid, walīd, mughīra, makhzūmī, died, century, arab, military, commander, initially, headed, campaigns, against, muhammad, behalf, quraysh, later, became, muslim, s. Khalid ibn al Walid ibn al Mughira al Makhzumi Arabic خالد بن الوليد بن المغيرة المخزومي romanized Khalid ibn al Walid ibn al Mughira al Makhzumi died 642 was a 7th century Arab military commander He initially headed campaigns against Muhammad on behalf of the Quraysh He later became a Muslim and spent the remainder of his career in service to Muhammad and the first two Rashidun caliphs Abu Bakr and Umar Khalid played the leading command roles in the Ridda Wars against rebel tribes in Arabia in 632 633 the initial campaigns in Sasanian Iraq in 633 634 and the conquest of Byzantine Syria in 634 638 Khalid ibn al Walidخالد بن الوليد Native nameخالد بن الوليد بن المغيرة المخزومي Other name s Sayf AllahAbu SulaymanBorn6th century CEMecca pre Islamic ArabiaDied642Medina or Homs Rashidun CaliphatePossible burial placeKhalid ibn al Walid Mosque Homs Syria AllegianceQuraysh 625 627 629 Muhammad 627 629 632 Rashidun Caliphate 632 638 Service wbr branchRashidun armyYears of service629 638Commands heldField commander in Najd and the Yamama 632 633 Supreme commander of Muslim armies in Syria 634 636 Field commander in northern Syria 636 638 Military governor of Qinnasrin c 638 Battles warsAgainst Muslims Battle of Uhud 625 Battle of the Trench 627 For Muslims Battle of Mu ta 629 Conquest of Mecca 629 or 630 Battle of Hunayn 630 Ridda wars Battle of Buzakha 632 Battle of Aqraba 633 Early campaigns in Iraq Battle of Dhat al Salasil 633 Battle of Nahr al Mar a 633 Battle of Ullays 633 Battle of Walaja 633 Capture of al Hira 633 Siege of Anbar 633 Siege of Ayn al Tamr 633 Battle of Firaz 634 Muslim conquest of Syria Battle of Marj Rahit 634 Siege of Bosra 634 Battle of Ajnadayn 634 Battle of Fahl 634 or 635 Siege of Damascus 634 635 Battle of Yarmouk 636 Siege of Emesa 637 638 Siege of Aleppo 637 Battle of Qinnasrin 637 638 Spouse s Asma bint Anas ibn MudrikLayla bint al MinhalChildrenSulaymanAbd al RahmanMuhajirRelationsBanu Makhzum a clan of the Quraysh tribe As a horseman of the Quraysh s aristocratic Banu Makhzum clan which ardently opposed Muhammad Khalid played an instrumental role in defeating Muhammad and his followers during the Battle of Uhud in 625 In 627 or 629 he converted to Islam in the presence of Muhammad who inducted him as an official military commander among the Muslims and gave him the title of Sayf Allah lit Sword of God During the Battle of Mu ta Khalid coordinated the safe withdrawal of Muslim troops against the Byzantines He also led the Bedouins under the Muslim army during the Muslim conquest of Mecca in 629 630 and the Battle of Hunayn in 630 After Muhammad s death Khalid was appointed to Najd and al Yamama with the purpose of suppressing or subjugating Arab tribes who were opposed to the nascent Muslim state this campaign culminated in Khalid s victory over Arab rebel leaders Tulayha and Musaylima at the Battle of Buzakha in 632 and the Battle of Yamama in 633 respectively Khalid subsequently moved against the largely Christian Arab tribes and the Sasanian Persian garrisons of the Euphrates valley in Iraq He was reassigned by Abu Bakr to command the Muslim armies in Syria and he led his men there on an unconventional march across a long waterless stretch of the Syrian Desert boosting his reputation as a military strategist As a result of decisive victories led by Khalid against the Byzantines at Ajnadayn 634 Fahl 634 or 635 Damascus 634 635 and the Yarmouk 636 the Rashidun army conquered most of the Levant Khalid was subsequently demoted and removed from the army s high command by Umar Khalid continued service as the key lieutenant of his successor Abu Ubayda ibn al Jarrah in the sieges of Homs and Aleppo and the Battle of Qinnasrin all in 637 638 These engagements collectively precipitated the retreat of imperial Byzantine troops from Syria under Emperor Heraclius Umar then dismissed Khalid from the governorship of Jund Qinnasrin around 638 Khalid died in either Medina or Homs in 642 He is generally considered by historians to be one of the most seasoned and accomplished generals of the early Islamic era and he is likewise commemorated throughout the Arab world Islamic tradition credits Khalid for his battlefield tactics and effective leadership of the early Muslim conquests but also accuses him of illicitly executing Arab tribesmen who had accepted Islam namely members of the Banu Jadhima during the lifetime of Muhammad and Malik ibn Nuwayra during the Ridda Wars and being responsible for moral and fiscal misconduct in the Levant Khalid s military fame disturbed some of the pious early Muslims most notably Umar who feared it could develop into a personality cult Contents 1 Ancestry and early life 2 Early military career 2 1 Opposition to Muhammad 2 2 Conversion to Islam and service under Muhammad 3 Commander in the Ridda wars 3 1 Battle of Buzakha 3 2 Execution of Malik ibn Nuwayra 3 3 Elimination of Musaylima and conquest of the Yamama 3 4 Conclusion of the Ridda wars 4 Campaigns in Iraq 4 1 Modern assessments 5 March to Syria 5 1 Itineraries and the desert march 6 Conquest of Syria 6 1 Siege of Damascus 6 2 Battle of Yarmouk 6 3 Demotion 6 4 Operations in northern Syria 6 5 Dismissal and death 7 Legacy 7 1 Family and claimants of descent 7 2 Mausoleum in Homs 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 Further readingAncestry and early lifeKhalid s father was al Walid ibn al Mughira an arbitrator of local disputes in Mecca in the Hejaz western Arabia 1 Al Walid is identified by the historians Ibn Hisham d 833 Ibn Durayd d 837 and Ibn Habib d 859 as the derider of the Islamic prophet Muhammad mentioned in the Meccan suras chapters of the Qur an 1 He belonged to the Banu Makhzum a leading clan of the Quraysh tribe and Mecca s pre Islamic aristocracy 2 The Makhzum are credited for introducing Meccan commerce to foreign markets 3 particularly Yemen and Abyssinia Ethiopia 2 and developed a reputation among the Quraysh for their intellect nobility and wealth 3 Their prominence was owed to the leadership of Khalid s paternal grandfather al Mughira ibn Abd Allah 3 Khalid s paternal uncle Hisham was known as the lord of Mecca and the date of his death was used by the Quraysh as the start of their calendar 4 The historian Muhammad Abdulhayy Shaban describes Khalid as a man of considerable standing within his clan and Mecca in general 5 Khalid s mother was al Asma bint al Harith ibn Hazn commonly known as Lubaba al Sughra Lubaba the Younger to distinguish her from her elder half sister Lubaba al Kubra of the nomadic Banu Hilal tribe 6 Lubaba al Sughra converted to Islam about c 622 and her paternal half sister Maymuna became a wife of Muhammad 6 Through his maternal relations Khalid became highly familiarized with the Bedouin nomadic Arab lifestyle 7 Genealogical tree of Khalid s clan the Banu MakhzumAl MughiraHisham d 598 Abu Rabi aAl Walid d 622 FakihAbu UmayyaAmr Abu Jahl d 624 Al Harith d 639 Ayyash d 636 Al Walid d 620s HishamKhalid d 642 Al Muhajir fl 630 633Umm Salama d 680s MuhammadIkrima d 634 or 636 Abd al RahmanAbd AllahIsma ilAbd al Rahman d 666 Muhajir d 657 SalamaHisham fl 691 706 Khalid fl 669 KhalidAyyubEarly military careerOpposition to Muhammad Map showing troop placements and maneuvers of the Battle of Uhud where Khalid and his horsemen routed a Muslim force led by the Islamic prophet Muhammad in 625 The Makhzum were strongly opposed to Muhammad and the clan s preeminent leader Amr ibn Hisham Abu Jahl Khalid s first cousin organized the boycott of Muhammad s clan the Banu Hashim of Quraysh in c 616 618 1 After Muhammad emigrated from Mecca to Medina in 622 the Makhzum under Abu Jahl commanded the war against him until they were routed at the Battle of Badr in 624 1 About twenty five of Khalid s paternal cousins including Abu Jahl and numerous other kinsmen were slain in that engagement 1 Mount Uhud pictured in 2009 where the battle took place The following year Khalid commanded the right flank of the cavalry in the Meccan army which confronted Muhammad at the Battle of Uhud north of Medina 8 According to the historian Donald Routledge Hill rather than launching a frontal assault against the Muslim lines on the slopes of Mount Uhud Khalid adopted the sound tactics of going around the mountain and bypassing the Muslim flank 9 He advanced through the Wadi Qanat valley west of Uhud until being checked by Muslim archers south of the valley at Mount Ruma 9 The Muslims gained the early advantage in the fight but after most of the Muslim archers abandoned their positions to join the raiding of the Meccans camp Khalid charged against the resulting break in the Muslims rear defensive lines 8 9 In the ensuing rout several dozen Muslims were killed 8 The narratives of the battle describe Khalid riding through the field slaying the Muslims with his lance 10 Shaban credits Khalid s military genius for the Quraysh s victory at Uhud the only engagement in which the tribe defeated Muhammad 11 In 628 Muhammad and his followers headed for Mecca to perform the umra lesser pilgrimage to Mecca and the Quraysh dispatched 200 cavalry to intercept him upon hearing of his departure 12 Khalid was at the head of the cavalry and Muhammad avoided confronting him by taking an unconventional and difficult alternate route ultimately reaching Hudaybiyya at the edge of Mecca Upon realizing Muhammad s change of course Khalid withdrew to Mecca 13 A truce between the Muslims and the Quraysh was reached in the Treaty of Hudaybiyya in March 12 Conversion to Islam and service under Muhammad In the year 6 AH c 627 or 8 AH c 629 Khalid embraced Islam in Muhammad s presence alongside the Qurayshite Amr ibn al As 14 the modern historian Michael Lecker comments that the accounts holding that Khalid and Amr converted in 8 AH are perhaps more trustworthy 15 The historian Akram Diya Umari holds that Khalid and Amr embraced Islam and relocated to Medina following the Treaty of Hudaybiyya apparently after the Quraysh dropped demands for the extradition of newer Muslim converts to Mecca 16 Following his conversion Khalid began to devote all his considerable military talents to the support of the new Muslim state according to the historian Hugh N Kennedy 17 Khalid participated in the expedition to Mu ta in modern day Jordan ordered by Muhammad in September 629 18 19 The purpose of the raid may have been to acquire booty in the wake of the Sasanian Persian army s retreat from Syria following its defeat by the Byzantine Empire in July 20 The Muslim detachment was routed by a Byzantine force consisting mostly of Arab tribesmen led by the Byzantine commander Theodore and several high ranking Muslim commanders were slain 20 21 Khalid took command of the army following the deaths of the appointed commanders and with considerable difficulty oversaw a safe withdrawal of the Muslims 19 22 Muhammad rewarded Khalid by bestowing on him the honorary title Sayf Allah the Sword of God 22 a The oasis town of Dumat al Jandal pictured in 2007 Khalid led an expedition against the city in 630 and may have led another expedition in 633 or 634 though modern historians have cast doubt about the latter campaign or Khalid s role in it In December 629 or January 630 Khalid took part in Muhammad s capture of Mecca after which most of the Quraysh converted to Islam 1 In that engagement Khalid led a nomadic contingent called muhajirat al arab the Bedouin emigrants 7 He led one of the two main pushes into the city and in the subsequent fighting with the Quraysh three of his men were killed while twelve Qurayshites were slain according to Ibn Ishaq the 8th century biographer of Muhammad 24 Khalid commanded the Bedouin Banu Sulaym in the Muslims vanguard at the Battle of Hunayn later that year In that confrontation the Muslims boosted by the influx of Qurayshite converts defeated the Thaqif the Ta if based traditional rivals of the Quraysh and their nomadic Hawazin allies 7 Khalid was then appointed to destroy the idol of al Uzza one of the goddesses worshiped in pre Islamic Arabian religion in the Nakhla area between Mecca and Ta if 18 Khalid was afterward dispatched to invite to Islam the Banu Jadhima in Yalamlam about 80 kilometers 50 mi south of Mecca but the Islamic traditional sources hold that he attacked the tribe illicitly 18 In the version of Ibn Ishaq Khalid had persuaded the Jadhima tribesmen to disarm and embrace Islam which he followed up by executing a number of the tribesmen in revenge for the Jadhima s slaying of his uncle Fakih ibn al Mughira dating to before Khalid s conversion to Islam In the narrative of Ibn Hajar al Asqalani d 1449 Khalid misunderstood the tribesmen s acceptance of the faith as a rejection or denigration of Islam due to his unfamiliarity with the Jadhima s accent and consequently attacked them In both versions Muhammad declared himself innocent of Khalid s action but did not discharge or punish him 25 According to the historian W Montgomery Watt the traditional account about the Jadhima incident is hardly more than a circumstantial denigration of Khalid and yields little solid historical fact 26 Later in 630 while Muhammad was at Tabuk he dispatched Khalid to capture the oasis market town of Dumat al Jandal 18 Khalid gained its surrender and imposed a heavy penalty on the inhabitants of the town one of whose chiefs the Kindite Ukaydir ibn Abd al Malik al Sakuni was ordered by Khalid to sign the capitulation treaty with Muhammad in Medina 27 In June 631 Khalid was sent by Muhammad at the head of 480 men to invite the mixed Christian and polytheistic Balharith tribe of Najran to embrace Islam 28 The tribe converted and Khalid instructed them in the Qur an and Islamic laws before returning to Muhammad in Medina with a Balharith delegation 28 Commander in the Ridda wars Map of Khalid s campaigns against the Arab tribes of Najd and the Yamama both in central Arabia during the Ridda wars The itinerary of his campaign is indicated by dashed red arrows The territory of the early Muslim state comprising Mecca Medina and Ta if and their environs is shaded in green After Muhammad s death in June 632 one of his early and close companions Abu Bakr became caliph leader of the Muslim community The issue of succession had caused discord among the Muslims 29 The Ansar lit Helpers the natives of Medina who hosted Muhammad after his emigration from Mecca attempted to elect their own leader 30 Opinion was split among the Muhajirun lit Emigrants the mostly Qurayshite natives of Mecca who emigrated with Muhammad to Medina One group advocated for a companion closer in kinship to Muhammad namely his cousin Ali while another group backed by new converts among the Qurayshite aristocracy rallied behind Abu Bakr The latter with the key intervention of the prominent Muhajirun Umar ibn al Khattab and Abu Ubayda ibn al Jarrah overrode the Ansar and acceded 29 Khalid was a staunch supporter of Abu Bakr s succession 31 A report preserved in a work by the 13th century scholar Ibn Abi l Hadid claims that Khalid was a partisan of Abu Bakr opposed Ali s candidacy and declared that Abu Bakr was not a man about whom one needs to enquire and his character needs not be sounded out 31 Most tribes in Arabia except those inhabiting the environs of Mecca Medina and Ta if discontinued their allegiance to the nascent Muslim state after Muhammad s death or had never established formal relations with Medina 32 Islamic historiography describes Abu Bakr s efforts to establish or reestablish Islamic rule over the tribes as the Ridda wars wars against the apostates Views of the wars by modern historians vary considerably Watt agrees with the Islamic characterization of the tribal opposition as anti Islamic in nature while Julius Wellhausen and C H Becker hold the tribes were opposed to the tax obligations to Medina rather than Islam as a religion In the view of Leone Caetani and Bernard Lewis the opposing tribes who had established ties with Medina regarded their religious and fiscal obligations as being a personal contract with Muhammad their attempts to negotiate different terms after his death were rejected by Abu Bakr who proceeded to launch the campaigns against them 33 Of the six main conflict zones in Arabia during the Ridda wars two were centered in Najd the central Arabian plateau the rebellion of the Asad Tayy and Ghatafan tribes under Tulayha and the rebellion of the Tamim tribe led by Sajah both leaders claimed to be prophets 34 35 After Abu Bakr quashed the threat to Medina by the Ghatafan at the Battle of Dhu al Qassa 36 he dispatched Khalid against the rebel tribes in Najd 37 b Khalid was Abu Bakr s third nominee to lead the campaign after his first two choices Zayd ibn al Khattab and Abu Hudhayfa ibn Utba refused the assignment 39 His forces were drawn from the Muhajirun and the Ansar 39 Throughout the campaign Khalid demonstrated considerable operational independence and did not stringently abide by the caliph s directives 40 In the words of Shaban he simply defeated whoever was there to be defeated 40 Battle of Buzakha Khalid s initial focus was the suppression of Tulayha s following 35 In late 632 he confronted Tulayha s forces at the Battle of Buzakha which took place at the eponymous well in Asad territory where the tribes were encamped The Tayy defected to the Muslims before Khalid s troops arrived to Buzakha the result of mediation between the two sides by the Tayy chief Adi ibn Hatim The latter had been assigned by Medina as its tax collector over his tribe and its traditional Asad rivals 41 Khalid bested the Asad Ghatafan forces in battle 42 When Tulayha appeared close to defeat the Fazara section of the Ghatafan under their chief Uyayna ibn Hisn deserted the field compelling Tulayha to flee for Syria 43 His tribe the Asad subsequently submitted to Khalid followed by the hitherto neutral Banu Amir which had awaited the results of the conflict before giving its allegiance to either side 43 Uyayna was captured and brought to Medina 42 As a result of the victory at Buzakha the Muslims gained control over most of Najd 44 Execution of Malik ibn Nuwayra After Buzakha Khalid proceeded against the rebel Tamimite chieftain Malik ibn Nuwayra headquartered in al Butah in the present day Qassim region 39 Malik had been appointed by Muhammad as the collector of the sadaqa alms tax over his clan of the Tamim the Yarbu but stopped forwarding this tax to Medina after Muhammad s death 45 Abu Bakr consequently resolved to have him executed by Khalid 45 The latter faced divisions within his army regarding this campaign with the Ansar initially staying behind citing instructions by Abu Bakr not to campaign further until receiving a direct order by the caliph 46 Khalid claimed such an order was his prerogative as the commander appointed by the caliph but he did not force the Ansar to participate and continued his march with troops from the Muhajirun and the Bedouin defectors from Buzakha and its aftermath the Ansar ultimately rejoined Khalid after internal deliberations 46 According to the most common account in the Muslim traditional sources Khalid s army encountered Malik and eleven of his clansmen from the Yarbu in 632 The Yarbu did not resist proclaimed their Muslim faith and were escorted to Khalid s camp Khalid had them all executed over the objection of an Ansarite who had been among the captors of the tribesmen and argued for the captives inviolability due to their testaments as Muslims Afterward Khalid married Malik s widow Umm Tamim bint al Minhal When news of Khalid s actions reached Medina Umar who had become Abu Bakr s chief aide pressed for Khalid to be punished or relieved of command but Abu Bakr pardoned him 45 According to the account of the 8th century historian Sayf ibn Umar Malik had also been cooperating with the prophetess Sajah his kinswoman from the Yarbu but after they were defeated by rival clans from the Tamim left her cause and retreated to his camp at al Butah There he was encountered with his small party by the Muslims 47 The modern historian Wilferd Madelung discounts Sayf s version asserting that Umar and other Muslims would not have protested Khalid s execution of Malik if the latter had left Islam 48 while Watt considers accounts about the Tamim during the Ridda in general to be obscure partly because the enemies of Khalid b al Walid have twisted the stories to blacken him 49 In the view of the modern historian Ella Landau Tasseron the truth behind Malik s career and death will remain buried under a heap of conflicting traditions 47 Elimination of Musaylima and conquest of the Yamama See also Battle of Yamama Map of the Yamama region shaded in red The region was conquered by Khalid from the Banu Hanifa tribe led by Musaylima Following a series of setbacks in her conflict with rival Tamim factions Sajah joined the strongest opponent of the Muslims Musaylima the leader of the sedentary Banu Hanifa tribe in the Yamama 35 37 the agricultural eastern borderlands of Najd 50 Musaylima had laid claims to prophet hood before Muhammad s emigration from Mecca and his entreaties for Muhammad to mutually recognize his divine revelation were rejected by Muhammad 51 After Muhammad died support for Musaylima surged in the Yamama 52 whose strategic value lay not only with its abundance of wheat fields and date palms but also its location connecting Medina to the regions of Bahrayn and Oman in eastern Arabia 53 Abu Bakr had dispatched Shurahbil ibn Hasana and Khalid s cousin Ikrima with an army to reinforce the Muslim governor in the Yamama Musaylima s tribal kinsman Thumama ibn Uthal 54 According to the modern historian Meir Jacob Kister it was likely the threat posed by this army which compelled Musaylima to forge an alliance with Sajah 55 Ikrima was repelled by Musaylima s forces and thereafter instructed by Abu Bakr to quell rebellions in Oman and Mahra central southern Arabia while Shurahbil was to remain in the Yamama in expectation of Khalid s large army 56 After his victories against the Bedouin of Najd Khalid headed to the Yamama with warnings of the Hanifa s military prowess and instructions by Abu Bakr to act severely toward the tribe should he be victorious 57 The 12th century historian Ibn Hubaysh al Asadi holds that the armies of Khalid and Musaylima respectively stood at 4 500 and 4 000 Kister dismisses the much larger figures cited by most of the early Muslim sources as exaggerations 58 Khalid s first three assaults against Musaylima at the plain of Aqraba were beaten back 58 The strength of Musaylima s warriors the superiority of their swords and the fickleness of the Bedouin contingents in Khalid s ranks were all reasons cited by the Muslims for their initial failures 58 Khalid heeded the counsel of the Ansarite Thabit ibn Qays to exclude the Bedouins from the next fight 59 In the fourth assault against the Hanifa the Muhajirun under Khalid and the Ansar under Thabit killed a lieutenant of Musaylima who subsequently fled with part of his army 59 The Muslims pursued the Hanifa to a large enclosed garden which Musaylima used to stage a last stand against the Muslims 59 The enclosure was stormed by the Muslims Musaylima was slain and most of the Hanifites were killed or wounded 59 The enclosure became known as the garden of death for the high casualties suffered by both sides 35 Khalid assigned a Hanifite taken captive early in the campaign Mujja a ibn al Murara to assess the strength morale and intentions of the Hanifa in their Yamama fortresses in the aftermath of Musaylima s slaying 37 60 Mujja a had the women and children of the tribe dress and pose as men at the openings of the forts in a ruse to boost their leverage with Khalid 37 he relayed to Khalid that the Hanifa still counted numerous warriors determined to continue the fight against the Muslims 60 This assessment along with the exhaustion of his own troops compelled Khalid to accept Mujja a s counsel for a ceasefire with the Hanifa despite Abu Bakr s directives to pursue retreating Hanifites and execute Hanifite prisoners of war 60 Khalid s terms with the Hanifa entailed the tribe s conversion to Islam and the surrender of their arms and armor and stockpiles of gold and silver 60 Abu Bakr ratified the treaty though he remained opposed to Khalid s concessions and warned that the Hanifa would remain eternally faithful to Musaylima 60 The treaty was further consecrated by Khalid s marriage to Mujja a s daughter According to Lecker Mujja a s ruse may have been invented by the Islamic tradition in order to protect Khalid s policy because the negotiated treaty caused the Muslims great losses 37 Khalid was allotted an orchard and a field in each village included in the treaty with the Hanifa while the villages excluded from the treaty were subject to punitive measures 7 Among these villages were Musaylima s hometown al Haddar and Mar at whose inhabitants were expelled or enslaved and the villages resettled with tribesmen from clans of the Tamim 7 61 Conclusion of the Ridda wars The traditional sources place the final suppression of the Arab tribes of the Ridda wars before March 633 though Caetani insists the campaigns must have continued into 634 35 The tribes in Bahrayn may have resisted the Muslims until the middle of 634 A number of the early Islamic sources ascribe a role for Khalid on the Bahrayn front after his victory over the Hanifa Shoufani deems this improbable while allowing the possibility that Khalid had earlier sent detachments from his army to reinforce the main Muslim commander in Bahrayn al Ala al Hadhrami 62 The Muslim war efforts in which Khalid played a vital part secured Medina s dominance over the strong tribes of Arabia which sought to diminish Islamic authority in the peninsula and restored the nascent Muslim state s prestige 7 According to Lecker Khalid and the other Qurayshite generals gained precious experience during the Ridda wars in mobilizing large multi tribal armies over long distances and benefited from the close acquaintance of the Kuraysh sic with tribal politics throughout Arabia 7 Campaigns in Iraq Map detailing Khalid s campaigns in Sasanian Iraq lower Mesopotamia based on the general outlines of the Islamic tradition With the Yamama pacified Khalid marched northward toward Sasanian territory in Iraq lower Mesopotamia 63 64 He reorganized his army possibly because the bulk of the Muhajirun may have withdrawn to Medina 65 According to the historian Khalil Athamina the remnants of Khalid s army consisted of nomadic Arabs from Medina s environs whose chiefs were appointed to replace the vacant command posts left by the sahaba companions of Muhammad 65 The historian Fred Donner holds that the Muhajirun and the Ansar still formed the core of his army along with a large proportion of nomadic Arabs likely from the Muzayna Tayy Tamim Asad and Ghatafan tribes 66 The commanders of the tribal contingents appointed by Khalid were Adi ibn Hatim of the Tayy and Asim ibn Amr of the Tamim 67 He arrived at the southern Iraqi frontier with about 1 000 warriors in the late spring or early summer of 633 68 The focus of Khalid s offensive was the western banks of the Euphrates river and the nomadic Arabs who dwelt there 69 The details of the campaign s itinerary are inconsistent in the early Muslim sources though Donner asserts that the general course of Khalid s progress in the first part of his campaigning in Iraq can be quite clearly traced 70 The 9th century histories of al Baladhuri and Khalifa ibn Khayyat hold Khalid s first major battle in Iraq was his victory over the Sasanian garrison at Ubulla the ancient Apologos near modern Basra and the nearby village of Khurayba though al Tabari d 923 considers attribution of the victory to Khalid as erroneous and that Ubulla was conquered later by Utba ibn Ghazwan al Mazini 70 Donner accepts the town s conquest by Utba somewhat later than 634 is the more likely scenario though the historian Khalid Yahya Blankinship argues Khalid at least may have led a raid there although Utbah actually reduced the area 71 From Ubulla s vicinity Khalid marched up the western bank of the Euphrates where he clashed with the small Sasanian garrisons who guarded the Iraqi frontier from nomadic incursions 70 The clashes occurred at Dhat al Salasil Nahr al Mar a a canal connecting the Euphrates with the Tigris immediately north of Ubulla Madhar a town several days north of Ubulla Ullays likely the ancient trade center of Vologesias and Walaja 70 The last two places were in the vicinity of al Hira a predominantly Arab market town and the Sasanian administrative center for the middle Euphrates valley 70 Al Hira s capture was the most significant gain of Khalid s campaign 70 After besting the city s Persian cavalry under the commander Azadhbih in minor clashes Khalid and part of his army entered the unwalled city 72 73 Al Hira s Arab tribal nobles many of whom were Nestorian Christians with blood ties to the nomadic tribes on the city s western desert fringes barricaded in their scattered fortified palaces 74 In the meantime the other part of Khalid s army harried the villages in al Hira s orbit many of which were captured or capitulated on tributary terms with the Muslims 72 The Arab nobility of al Hira surrendered in an agreement with Khalid whereby the city paid a tribute in return for assurances that al Hira s churches and palaces would not be disturbed 72 73 The annual sum to be paid by al Hira amounted to 60 000 or 90 000 silver dirhams 75 76 which Khalid forwarded to Medina marking the first tribute the Caliphate received from Iraq 73 During the engagements in and around al Hira Khalid received key assistance from al Muthanna ibn Haritha and his Shayban tribe who had been raiding this frontier for a considerable period before Khalid s arrival though it is not clear if al Muthanna s earlier activities were linked to the nascent Muslim state 77 After Khalid departed he left al Muthanna in practical control of al Hira and its vicinity 78 He received similar assistance from the Sadus clan of the Dhuhl tribe under Qutba ibn Qatada and the Ijl tribe under al Madh ur ibn Adi during the engagements at Ubulla and Walaja 79 None of these tribes all of which were branches of the Banu Bakr confederation joined Khalid when he operated outside of their tribal areas 80 Khalid continued northward along the Euphrates valley attacking Anbar on the east bank of the river where he secured capitulation terms from its Sasanian commander 72 Afterward he plundered the surrounding market villages frequented by tribesmen from the Bakr and Quda a confederations before moving against Ayn al Tamr an oasis town west of the Euphrates and about 90 kilometers 56 mi south of Anbar 72 Khalid encountered stiff resistance there by the tribesmen of the Namir compelling him to besiege the town s fortress 72 The Namir were led by Hilal ibn Aqqa a Christian chieftain allied with the Sasanians who Khalid had crucified after defeating him 81 Ayn al Tamr capitulated and Khalid captured the town of Sandawda to the north 72 By this stage Khalid had subjugated the western areas of the lower Euphrates and the nomadic tribes including the Namir Taghlib Iyad Taymallat and most of the Ijl as well as the settled Arab tribesmen which resided there 82 Modern assessments Athamina doubts the Islamic traditional narrative that Abu Bakr directed Khalid to launch a campaign in Iraq citing Abu Bakr s disinterest in Iraq at a time when the Muslim state s energies were focused principally on the conquest of Syria 83 Unlike Syria Iraq had not been the focus of Muhammad s or the early Muslims ambitions nor did the Quraysh maintain trading interests in the region dating to the pre Islamic period as they had in Syria 84 According to Shaban it is unclear if Khalid requested or received Abu Bakr s sanction to raid Iraq or ignored objections by the caliph 40 Athamina notes hints in the traditional sources that Khalid initiated the campaign unilaterally implying that the return of the Muhajirun in Khalid s ranks to Medina following Musaylima s defeat likely represented their protest of Khalid s ambitions in Iraq 85 Shaban holds that the tribesmen who remained in Khalid s army were motivated by the prospect of war booty particularly amid an economic crisis in Arabia which had arisen in the aftermath of the Ridda campaigns 40 According to Fred Donner the subjugation of Arab tribes may have been Khalid s primary goal in Iraq and clashes with Persian troops were the inevitable if incidental result of the tribes alignment with the Sasanian Empire 82 In Kennedy s view Khalid s push toward the desert frontier of Iraq was a natural continuation of his work subduing the tribes of northeastern Arabia and in line with Medina s policy to bring all nomadic Arab tribes under its authority 68 Madelung asserts Abu Bakr relied on the Qurayshite aristocracy during the Ridda wars and early Muslim conquests and speculates that the caliph dispatched Khalid to Iraq to allot the Makhzum an interest in that region 86 The extent of Khalid s role in the conquest of Iraq is disputed by modern historians 87 Patricia Crone argues it is unlikely Khalid played any role on the Iraqi front citing seeming contradictions by contemporary non Arabic sources 88 namely the Armenian chronicle of Sebeos c 661 and the Khuzistan Chronicle c 680 18 The former only records Arab armies being sent to conquer Iraq as the Muslim conquest of Syria was already underway as opposed to before as held by the traditional Islamic sources while the latter mentions Khalid as the conqueror of Syria only 88 Crone views the traditional reports as part of a general theme in the largely Iraq based Abbasid era post 750 sources to diminish the early Muslims focus on Syria in favor of Iraq 18 Crone s assessment is considered a radical critique of the traditional sources by R Stephen Humphreys 89 while Khalid Yahya Blankinship calls it too one sided The fact that Khalid is a major hero in the historical traditions of Iraq certainly suggests ties there that can have come only from his early participation in its conquest 87 March to SyriaAll early Islamic accounts agree that Khalid was ordered by Abu Bakr to leave Iraq for Syria to support Muslim forces already present there Most of these accounts hold that the caliph s order was prompted by requests for reinforcements by the Muslim commanders in Syria 90 Khalid likely began his march to Syria in early April 634 91 He left small Muslim garrisons in the conquered cities of Iraq under the overall military command of al Muthanna ibn Haritha 92 The chronological sequence of events after Khalid s operations in Ayn al Tamr is inconsistent and confused 93 According to Donner Khalid undertook two further principal operations before embarking on his march to Syria which have often been conflated by the sources with events that occurred during the march One of the operations was against Dumat al Jandal and the other against the Namir and Taghlib tribes present along the western banks of the upper Euphrates valley as far as the Balikh tributary and the Jabal al Bishri mountains northeast of Palmyra 93 It is unclear which engagement occurred first though both were Muslim efforts to bring the mostly nomadic Arab tribes of north Arabia and the Syrian steppe under Medina s control 93 In the Dumat al Jandal campaign Khalid was instructed by Abu Bakr or requested by one of the commanders of the campaign al Walid ibn Uqba to reinforce the lead commander Iyad ibn Ghanm s faltering siege of the oasis town Its defenders were backed by their nomadic allies from the Byzantine confederate tribes the Ghassanids Tanukhids Salihids Bahra and Banu Kalb 94 Khalid left Ayn al Tamr for Dumat al Jandal where the combined Muslim forces bested the defenders in a pitched battle 94 Afterward Khalid executed the town s Kindite leader Ukaydir who had defected from Medina following Muhammad s death while the Kalbite chief Wadi a was spared after the intercession of his Tamimite allies in the Muslims camp 95 The historians Michael Jan de Goeje and Caetani dismiss altogether that Khalid led an expedition to Dumat al Jandal following his Iraqi campaign and that the city mentioned in the traditional sources was likely the town by the same name near al Hira 27 The historian Laura Veccia Vaglieri calls their assessment logical and writes that it seems impossible that Khalid could have made such a detour which would have taken him so far out of his way while delaying the accomplishment of his mission to join the Muslim armies in Syria 27 Vaglieri surmises that the oasis was conquered by Iyad ibn Ghanm or possibly Amr ibn al As as the latter had been previously tasked during the Ridda wars with suppressing Wadi a who had barricaded himself in Dumat al Jandal 27 Crone dismissing Khalid s role in Iraq entirely asserts that Khalid had definitively captured Dumat al Jandal in the 631 campaign and from there crossed the desert to engage in the Syrian conquest 18 Itineraries and the desert march A map showing three general itineraries of Khalid s march to Syria from Iraq around April 634 as summarized by the historian Fred Donner The desert march portion of the itineraries are indicated in red The starting point of Khalid s general march to Syria was al Hira according to most of the traditional accounts with the exception of al Baladhuri who places it at Ayn al Tamr 96 The segment of the general march called the desert march by the sources occurred at an unclear stage after the al Hira departure 97 This phase entailed Khalid and his men numbering between 500 to 800 strong 98 marching from a well called Quraqir across a vast stretch of waterless desert for six days and five nights until reaching a source of water at a place called Suwa 99 As his men did not possess sufficient waterskins to traverse this distance with their horses and camels Khalid had some twenty of his camels increase their typical water intake and sealed their mouths to prevent the camels from eating and consequently spoiling the water in their stomachs each day of the march he had a number of the camels slaughtered so his men could drink the water stored in the camels stomachs 98 100 The utilization of the camels as water storage and the locating of the water source at Suwa were the result of advice given to Khalid by his guide Rafi ibn Amr of the Tayy 98 101 Excluding the above mentioned operations in Dumat al Jandal and the upper Euphrates valley the traditional accounts agree on only two events of Khalid s route to Syria after the departure from al Hira the desert march between Quraqir and Suwa and a subsequent raid against the Bahra tribe at or near Suwa and operations which resulted in the submission of Palmyra otherwise they diverge in tracing Khalid s itinerary 102 Based on these accounts Donner summarizes three possible routes taken by Khalid to the vicinity of Damascus two via Palmyra from the north and the one via Dumat al Jandal from the south 97 Kennedy notes the sources are equally certain in their advocacy of their respective itineraries and there is simply no knowing which version is correct 98 In the first Palmyra Damascus itinerary Khalid marches upwards along the Euphrates passing through places he had previously reduced to Jabal al Bishri and from there successively moves southwestwards through Palmyra al Qaryatayn and Huwwarin before reaching the Damascus area 101 In this route the only span where a desert march could have occurred is between Jabal al Bishri and Palmyra though the area between the two places is considerably less than a six day march and contains a number of water sources 101 The second Palmyra Damascus itinerary is a relatively direct route between al Hira to Palmyra via Ayn al Tamr 101 The stretch of desert between Ayn al Tamr and Palmyra is long enough to corroborate a six day march and contains scarce watering points though there are no placenames that can be interpreted as Quraqir or Suwa 103 In the Dumat al Jandal Damascus route such placenames exist namely the sites of Qulban Qurajir associated with Quraqir along the eastern edge of Wadi Sirhan and Sab Biyar which is identified with Suwa 150 kilometers 93 mi east of Damascus 103 The span between the two sites is arid and corresponds with the six day march narrative 103 The desert march is the most celebrated episode of Khalid s expedition and medieval Futuh Islamic conquests literature in general 99 Kennedy writes that the desert march has been enshrined in history and legend Arab sources marvelled at his Khalid s endurance modern scholars have seen him as a master of strategy 98 He asserts it is certain Khalid embarked on the march a memorable feat of military endurance and his arrival in Syria was an important ingredient of the success of Muslim arms there 98 The historian Moshe Gil calls the march a feat which has no parallel and a testament to Khalid s qualities as an outstanding commander 104 The historian Ryan J Lynch deems Khalid s desert march to be a literary construct by the authors of the Islamic tradition to form a narrative linking the Muslim conquests of Iraq and Syria and presenting the conquests as a well calculated singular affair in line with the authors alleged polemical motives 105 Lynch holds that the story of the march which would have excited and entertained Muslim audiences was created out of fragments of social memory by inhabitants who attributed the conquests of their towns or areas to Khalid as a means to earn a certain degree of prestige through association with the famous general 105 Conquest of SyriaMost traditional accounts have the first Muslim armies deploy to Syria from Medina at the beginning of 13 AH early spring 634 106 The commanders of the Muslim armies were Amr ibn al As Yazid ibn Abi Sufyan Shurahbil ibn Hasana and Abu Ubayda ibn al Jarrah 107 though the last may have not deployed to Syria until after Umar s succession to the caliphate in the summer of 634 following Abu Bakr s death 108 According to Donner the traditional sources dating of the first Muslim armies deployment to Syria was behind by several months It most likely occurred in the autumn of 633 which better conforms with the anonymous Syriac Chronicle of 724 which dates the first clash between the Muslim armies and the Byzantines to February 634 109 By the time Khalid had left Iraq the Muslim armies in Syria had already fought a number of skirmishes with local Byzantine garrisons and dominated the southern Syrian countryside but did not control any urban centers 110 Khalid was appointed supreme commander of the Muslim armies in Syria 65 Accounts cited by al Baladhuri al Tabari Ibn A tham al Fasawi d 987 and Ibn Hubaysh al Asadi hold that Abu Bakr appointed Khalid supreme commander as part of his reassignment from Iraq to Syria citing the general s military talents and record 111 A single account in al Baladhuri instead attributes Khalid s appointment to a consensus among the commanders already in Syria though Athamina asserts it is inconceivable that a man like Amr ibn al As would agree to such a decision voluntarily 112 Upon his accession Umar may have confirmed Khalid as supreme commander 113 Khalid reached the meadow of Marj Rahit north of Damascus after his army s trek across the desert 114 He arrived on Easter day of that year i e 24 April 634 106 115 a rare precise date cited by most traditional sources which Donner deems to be likely correct 91 There Khalid attacked a group of Ghassanids celebrating Easter before he or his subordinate commanders raided the Ghouta agricultural belt around Damascus 116 Afterward Khalid and the commanders of the earlier Muslim armies except for Amr assembled at Bosra southeast of Damascus 116 The trading center of Bosra along with the Hauran region in which it lies had historically supplied the nomadic tribes of Arabia with wheat oil and wine and had been visited by Muhammad during his youth 115 The Byzantines may not have reestablished an imperial garrison in the city in the aftermath of the Sasanian withdrawal in 628 and the Muslim armies encountered token resistance during their siege 115 Bosra capitulated in late May 634 making it the first major city in Syria to fall to the Muslims 117 118 Khalid and the Muslim commanders headed west to Palestine to join Amr as the latter s subordinates in the Battle of Ajnadayn the first major confrontation with the Byzantines in July 119 120 The battle ended in a decisive victory for the Muslims and the Byzantines retreated toward Pella Fahl in Arabic a major city east of the Jordan River 119 120 The Muslims pursued them and scored another major victory at the Battle of Fahl though it is unclear if Amr or Khalid held overall command in the engagement 121 Siege of Damascus Muslim and Byzantine troop movements in Syria before the battle of Yarmouk in 636 The remnants of the Byzantine forces from Ajnadayn and Fahl retreated north to Damascus where the Byzantine commanders called for imperial reinforcements 122 Khalid advanced 122 possibly besting a Byzantine unit at the Marj al Suffar plain before besieging the city 123 Each of the five Muslim commanders were charged with blocking one of the city gates Khalid was stationed at Bab Sharqi the East Gate 122 124 A sixth contingent positioned at Barzeh immediately north of Damascus repulsed relief troops dispatched by the Byzantine emperor Heraclius r 575 641 122 124 Several traditions relate the Muslims capture of Damascus 123 The most popular narrative is preserved by the Damascus based Ibn Asakir d 1175 according to whom Khalid and his men breached the Bab Sharqi gate 123 Khalid and his men scaled the city s eastern walls and killed the guards and other defenders at Bab Sharqi 125 As his forces entered from the east Muslim forces led by Abu Ubayda had entered peacefully from the western Bab al Jabiya gate after negotiations with Damascene notables led by Mansur ibn Sarjun a high ranking city official 123 126 The Muslim armies met up in the city center where capitulation terms were agreed 126 On the other hand al Baladhuri holds that Khalid entered peacefully from Bab Sharqi while Abu Ubayda entered from the west by force 123 Modern research questions Abu Ubayda s arrival in Syria by the time of the siege Caetani cast doubt about the aforementioned traditions while the orientalist Henri Lammens substituted Abu Ubayda with Yazid ibn Abi Sufyan 127 In the versions of the Syriac author Dionysius of Tel Mahre d 845 and the Melkite patriarch Eutychius of Alexandria d 940 the Damascenes led by Mansur having become weary of the siege and convinced of the besiegers determination approached Khalid at Bab Sharqi with an offer to open the gate in return for assurances of safety Khalid accepted and ordered the drafting of a capitulation agreement 128 Although several versions of Khalid s treaty were recorded in the early Muslim and Christian sources c they generally concur that the inhabitants lives properties and churches were to be safeguarded in return for their payment of the jizya poll tax 130 Imperial properties were confiscated by the Muslims 126 131 The treaty probably served as the model for the capitulation agreements made throughout Syria as well Iraq and Egypt during the early Muslim conquests 130 d Although the accounts cited by al Waqidi d 823 and Ibn Ishaq agree that Damascus surrendered in August September 635 they provide varying timelines of the siege ranging from four to fourteen months 133 122 Battle of Yarmouk Main article Battle of Yarmouk The ravines of the Yarmouk River in the vicinity of the Battle of Yarmouk In the spring of 636 Khalid withdrew his forces from Damascus to the old Ghassanid capital at Jabiya in the Golan 123 He was prompted by the approach of a large Byzantine army dispatched by Heraclius 123 consisting of imperial troops led by Vahan and Theodore Trithyrius and frontier troops including Christian Arab light cavalry led by the Ghassanid phylarch Jabala ibn al Ayham and Armenian auxiliaries led by a certain Georgius called Jaraja by the Arabs 134 135 The sizes of the forces are disputed by modern historians Donner holds the Byzantines outnumbered the Muslims four to one 136 Walter E Kaegi writes the Byzantines probably enjoyed numerical superiority with 15 000 20 000 or more troops 134 and John Walter Jandora holds there was likely near parity in numbers between the two sides with the Muslims at 36 000 men including 10 000 from Khalid s army and the Byzantines at about 40 000 137 The Byzantine army set up camp at the Ruqqad tributary west of the Muslims positions at Jabiya 136 Khalid consequently withdrew taking up position north of the Yarmouk River 138 close to where the Ruqqad meets the Yarmouk 139 The area spanned high hilltops water sources critical routes connecting Damascus to the Galilee and historic pastures of the Ghassanids 139 For over a month the Muslims held the strategic high ground between Adhri at modern Daraa and their camp near Dayr Ayyub and bested the Byzantines in a skirmish outside Jabiya on 23 July 636 134 Jandora asserts that the Byzantines Christian Arab and Armenian auxiliaries deserted or defected but that the Byzantine force remained formidable consisting of a vanguard of heavy cavalry and a rear guard of infantrymen when they approached the Muslim defensive lines 140 Illustration of the Battle of Yarmouk by an anonymous Catalan illustrator c 1310 1325 Khalid split his cavalry into two main groups each positioned behind the Muslims right and left infantry wings to protect his forces from a potential envelopment by the Byzantine heavy cavalry 140 He stationed an elite squadron of 200 300 horsemen to support the center of his defensive line and left archers posted in the Muslims camp near Dayr Ayyub where they could be most effective against an incoming Byzantine force 140 The Byzantines initial assaults against the Muslims right and left flanks successively failed but they kept up the momentum until the entire Muslim line fell back or as contemporary Christian sources maintain feigned retreat 140 The Byzantines pursued the Muslims into their camp where the Muslims had their camel herds hobbled to form a series of defensive perimeters from which the infantry could fight and which Byzantine cavalries could not easily penetrate 141 As a result the Byzantines were left vulnerable to attack by Muslim archers their momentum was halted and their left flank exposed 140 Khalid and his cavalries used the opportunity to pierce the Byzantines left flank taking advantage of the gap between the Byzantine infantry and cavalry 134 142 143 Khalid enveloped the opposing heavy cavalry on either side but intentionally left an opening from which the Byzantines could only escape northward far from their infantry 143 According to the 9th century Byzantine historian Theophanes the Byzantine infantry mutinied under Vahan possibly in light of Theodore s failure to counter the attack on the cavalry The infantry was subsequently routed 144 The Byzantine cavalry meanwhile had withdrawn north to the area between the Ruqqad and Allan tributaries 134 Khalid sent a force to pursue and prevent them from regrouping 140 He followed up with a nighttime operation in which he seized the Ruqqad bridge the only viable withdrawal route for the Byzantines 134 The Muslims then assaulted the Byzantines camps on 20 August and massacred most of the Byzantine troops 134 or induced panic in Byzantine ranks causing thousands to die in the Yarmouk s ravines in an attempt to make a westward retreat 145 Jandora credits the Muslim victory at Yarmouk to the cohesion and superior leadership of the Muslim army particularly the ingenuity of Khalid in comparison to the widespread discord in the Byzantine army s ranks and the conventional tactics of Theodorus which Khalid correctly anticipated 146 In Gil s view Khalid s withdrawal before the army of Heraclius the evacuation of Damascus and the counter movement on the Yarmouk tributaries are evidence of his excellent organising ability and his skill at manoeuvring on the battlefield 104 The Byzantine rout marked the destruction of their last effective army in Syria immediately securing earlier Muslim gains in Palestine and Transjordan and paving the way for the recapture of Damascus 134 in December this time by Abu Ubayda 131 and the conquest of the Beqaa Valley and ultimately the rest of Syria to the north 134 In Jandora s assessment Yarmouk was one of the most important battles of World History ultimately leading to Muslim victories which expanded the Caliphate between the Pyrenees mountains and Central Asia 147 Demotion Khalid was retained as supreme commander of the Muslim forces in Syria between six months and two years from the start of Umar s caliphate depending on the source 148 Modern historians mostly agree that Umar s dismissal of Khalid probably occurred in the aftermath of Yarmouk 149 The caliph appointed Abu Ubayda to Khalid s place reassigned his troops to the remaining Muslim commanders and subordinated Khalid under the command of one of Abu Ubayda s lieutenants a later order deployed the bulk of Khalid s former troops to Iraq 150 Varied causes for Khalid s dismissal from the supreme command are cited by the early Islamic sources 151 Among them were his independent decision making and minimal coordination with the leadership in Medina older allegations of moral misconduct including his execution of Malik ibn Nuwayra and subsequent marriage to Malik s widow accusations of generous distribution of booty to members of the tribal nobility to the detriment of eligible early Muslim converts personal animosity between Khalid and Umar and Umar s uneasiness over Khalid s heroic reputation among the Muslims which he feared could develop into a personality cult 152 The modern historians De Goeje William Muir and Andreas Stratos viewed Umar s enmity with Khalid as a contributing cause of Khalid s dismissal Shaban acknowledges the enmity but asserts it had no bearing on the caliph s decision 148 De Goeje dismisses Khalid s extravagant grants to the tribal nobility a common practice among the early Muslim leaders including Muhammad as a cause for his sacking 148 Muir Becker Stratos and Philip K Hitti have proposed that Khalid was ultimately dismissed because the Muslim gains in Syria in the aftermath of Yarmouk required the replacement of a military commander at the helm with a capable administrator such as Abu Ubayda 151 Athamina doubts all the aforementioned reasons arguing the cause must have been vital at a time when large parts of Syria remained under Byzantine control and Heraclius had not abandoned the province 153 Athamina holds that with all his military limitations Abu Ubayda would not have been considered a worthy replacement for Khalid s incomparable talents 153 Medina s lack of a regular standing army the need to redeploy fighters to other fronts and the Byzantine threat to Muslim gains in Syria all required the establishment of a defense structure based on the older established Arab tribes in Syria which had served as confederates of Byzantium After Medina s entreaties to the leading confederates the Ghassanids were rebuffed relations were established with the Kalb Judham and Lakhm 154 These tribes likely considered the large numbers of outside Arab tribesmen in Khalid s army as a threat to their political and economic power 155 Khalid s initial force of 500 800 men had swelled to as high as 10 000 as a result of tribesmen joining his army s ranks from the Iraqi front or Arabia and as high as 30 000 40 000 factoring in their families 156 Athamina concludes Umar dismissed Khalid and recalled his troops from Syria as an overture to the Kalb and their allies 157 Operations in northern Syria Abu Ubayda and Khalid proceeded from Damascus northward to Homs called Emesa by the Byzantines and besieged the city probably in the winter of 636 637 158 The siege held amid a number of sorties by the Byzantine defenders and the city capitulated in the spring 158 Per the surrender terms taxes were imposed on the inhabitants in return for guarantees of protection for their property churches water mills and the city walls 159 A quarter of the church of St John was reserved for Muslim use and abandoned houses and gardens were confiscated and distributed by Abu Ubayda or Khalid among the Muslim troops and their families 159 Owing to its proximity to the desert steppe Homs was viewed as a favorable place of settlement for Arab tribesmen and became the first city in Syria to acquire a large Muslim population 159 Information about the subsequent conquests in northern Syria is scant and partly contradictory 160 Khalid was dispatched by Abu Ubayda to conquer Qinnasrin called Chalcis by the Byzantines and nearby Aleppo 161 Khalid routed a Byzantine force led by a certain Minas in the outskirts of Qinnasrin 161 162 There Khalid spared the inhabitants following their appeal and claim that they were Arabs forcibly conscripted by the Byzantines 162 He followed up by besieging the walled town of Qinnasrin 163 which capitulated in August September 638 164 He and Iyad ibn Ghanm then launched the first Muslim raid into Byzantine Anatolia 165 Khalid made Qinnasrin his headquarters settling there with his wife 163 Khalid was appointed Abu Ubayda s deputy governor in Qinnasrin in 638 166 The campaigns against Homs and Qinnasrin resulted in the conquest of northwestern Syria and prompted Heraclius to abandon his headquarters at Edessa for Samosata in Anatolia and ultimately to the imperial capital of Constantinople 167 Khalid may have participated in the siege of Jerusalem which capitulated in 637 or 638 168 According to al Tabari he was one of the witnesses of a letter of assurance by Umar to Patriarch Sophronius of Jerusalem guaranteeing the safety of the city s people and property 169 Dismissal and death According to Sayf ibn Umar later in 638 Khalid was rumored to have lavishly distributed war spoils from his northern Syrian campaigns including a sum to the Kindite nobleman al Ash ath ibn Qays 170 Umar consequently ordered that Abu Ubayda publicly interrogate and relieve Khalid from his post regardless of the interrogation s outcome as well as to put Qinnasrin under Abu Ubayda s direct administration 171 Following his interrogation in Homs Khalid issued successive farewell speeches to the troops in Qinnasrin and Homs before being summoned by Umar to Medina 172 Sayf s account notes that Umar sent notice to the Muslim garrisons in Syria and Iraq that Khalid was dismissed not as a result of improprieties but because the troops had become captivated by illusions on account of him Khalid and he feared they would disproportionately place their trust in him rather than God 173 Khalid s sacking did not elicit public backlash possibly due to existing awareness in the Muslim polity of Umar s enmity toward Khalid which prepared the public for his dismissal or because of existing hostility toward the Makhzum in general as a result of their earlier opposition to Muhammad and the early Muslims 174 In the account of Ibn Asakir Umar declared at a council of the Muslim army at Jabiya in 638 that Khalid was dismissed for lavishing war spoils on war heroes tribal nobles and poets instead of reserving the sums for needy Muslims 150 No attending commanders voiced opposition except for a Makhzumite who accused Umar of violating the military mandate given to Khalid by Muhammad 175 According to the Muslim jurist al Zuhri d 742 before his death in 639 Abu Ubayda appointed Khalid and Iyad ibn Ghanm as his successors 176 but Umar confirmed only Iyad as governor of the Homs Qinnasrin Jazira district and appointed Yazid ibn Abi Sufyan governor over the rest of Syria namely the districts of Damascus Jordan and Palestine 177 Khalid died in Medina or Homs in 21 AH c 642 CE 178 179 Purported hadiths related about Khalid include Muhammad s urgings to Muslims not to harm Khalid and prophecies that Khalid would be dealt injustices despite his tremendous contributions to Islam 180 In Islamic literary narratives Umar expresses remorse over dismissing Khalid and the women of Medina mourn his death en masse 180 Athamina considers these all to be no more than latter day expressions of sympathy on the part of subsequent generations for the heroic character of Khalid as portrayed by Islamic tradition 180 LegacyKhalid is credited by the early sources for being the most effective commander of the conquests including after his dismissal from the supreme command 181 He is considered one of the tactical geniuses of the early Islamic period by Donner 110 The historian Carole Hillenbrand calls him the most famous of all Arab Muslim generals 182 and Humphreys describes him as perhaps the most famous and brilliant Arab general of the Riddah wars and the early conquests 89 In Kennedy s assessment Khalid was a brilliant ruthless military commander but one with whom the more pious Muslims could never feel entirely comfortable 183 While recognizing his military achievements the early Islamic sources present a mixed assessment of Khalid due to his early confrontation with Muhammad at Uhud his reputation for brutal or disproportionate actions against Arab tribesmen during the Ridda wars and his military fame which disturbed the pious early converts 17 According to the historian Richard Blackburn despite attempts in the early sources to discredit Khalid his reputation has developed as Islam s most formidable warrior during the eras of Muhammad Abu Bakr and the conquest of Syria 179 Kennedy notes that his reputation as a great general has lasted through the generations and streets are named after him all over the Arab world 17 Khalid is considered a war hero by Sunni Muslims while many Shia Muslims view him as a war criminal for his execution of Malik ibn Nuwayra and immediate marriage of his widow in contravention of the traditional Islamic bereavement period 184 Family and claimants of descent Main article Khalid ibn al Walid Mosque Since at least the 12th century Khalid s tomb has been purported to be located in the present day Khalid ibn al Walid Mosque in Homs Syria The purported tomb of Khalid within the Khalid ibn al Walid Mosque Khalid s eldest son was named Sulayman hence his kunya paedonymic Abu Sulayman father of Sulayman 185 Khalid was married to Asma a daughter of Anas ibn Mudrik a prominent chieftain and poet of the Khath am tribe 186 Their son Abd al Rahman became a reputable commander in the Arab Byzantine wars and a close aide of Mu awiya ibn Abi Sufyan the governor of Syria and later founder and first caliph of the Umayyad Caliphate serving as the latter s deputy governor of the Homs Qinnasrin Jazira district 187 188 Another son of Khalid Muhajir was a supporter of Ali who reigned as caliph in 656 661 and died fighting Mu awiya s army at the Battle of Siffin in 657 during the First Muslim Civil War 187 Following Abd al Rahman s death in 666 allegedly as a result of poisoning ordered by Mu awiya Muhajir s son Khalid attempted to take revenge for his uncle s slaying and was arrested but Mu awiya later released him after Khalid paid the blood money 189 Abd al Rahman s son Khalid was a commander of a naval campaign against the Byzantines in 668 or 669 18 190 There is no further significant role played by members of Khalid s family in the historical record 18 His male line of descent ended toward the collapse of the Umayyad Caliphate in 750 or shortly after when all forty of his male descendants died in a plague in Syria according to the 11th century historian Ibn Hazm 187 As a result his family s properties including his residence and several other houses in Medina were inherited by Ayyub ibn Salama a great grandson of Khalid s brother al Walid ibn al Walid They remained in the possession of Ayyub s descendants until at least the late 9th century 191 e The family of the 12th century Arab poet Ibn al Qaysarani claimed descent from Muhajir ibn Khalid though the 13th century historian Ibn Khallikan notes the claim contradicted the consensus of Arabic historians and genealogists that Khalid s line of descent terminated in the early Islamic period 194 A female line of descent may have survived and was claimed by the 15th century Sufi religious leader Siraj al Din Muhammad ibn Ali al Makhzumi of Homs 195 Kizil Ahmed Bey the leader of the Isfendiyarids who ruled a principality in Anatolia until its annexation by the Ottomans fabricated his dynasty s descent from Khalid 196 The Sur tribe under Sher Shah a 16th century ruler of India also claimed descent from Khalid 197 Mausoleum in Homs Starting in the Ayyubid period in Syria 1182 1260 Homs has obtained fame as the location of the purported tomb and mosque of Khalid 198 The 12th century traveler Ibn Jubayr noted that the tomb contained the graves of Khalid and his son Abd al Rahman 179 Muslim tradition since then has placed Khalid s tomb in the city 179 The building was altered by the first Ayyubid sultan Saladin r 1171 1193 and again in the 13th century 198 The Mamluk sultan Baybars r 1260 1277 attempted to link his own military achievements with those of Khalid by having an inscription honoring himself carved on Khalid s mausoleum in Homs in 1266 182 During his 17th century visit to the mausoleum the Muslim scholar Abd al Ghani al Nabulsi agreed that Khalid was buried there but also noted an alternative Islamic tradition that the grave belonged to Mu awiya s grandson Khalid ibn Yazid 198 The current mosque dates to 1908 when the Ottoman authorities rebuilt the structure 179 199 See also7th century in Lebanon Ṣaḥaba who have visited Lebanon List of battles of Muhammad List of Arab military figuresNotes The time and place that Khalid gained the epithet Sayf Allah the Sword of God varies in the Islamic sources Historians of the 8th and early 9th centuries indicate the title was awarded to Khalid by Caliph Abu Bakr r 632 634 for his successes in the Ridda wars against the tribes of Arabia opposed to the Muslim state In the mid to late 9th century the first reports began to circulate in Islamic histories that Muhammad awarded the title to Khalid for his role against the Byzantines at the Battle of Mu ta 23 Abu Bakr had previously dispatched the bulk of the Muslim army under Usama ibn Zayd to attack Byzantine Syria despite threats to the Muslim towns of the Hejaz by nomadic tribes which had discarded Muslim authority 35 37 The historian Elias Shoufani contends that Usama s expedition was a much smaller force than had been originally planned by the Islamic prophet Muhammad and doubts its ranks comprised most of the Ansar Muhajirun and the Bedouin tribesmen of the Mecca and Medina areas rather it probably consisted mainly of poorer brigand types among the Muslims who depended on booty from raids for sustenance 38 Lecker holds that Khalid was deployed against the tribes in Najd before the return of Usama s army 37 while Watt notes Khalid was sent with a large army after Usama s return 35 Most of the Muslim accounts are traced to the prominent 8th century jurist of Syria al Awza i and among the Muslim historians the Damascus based Ibn Asakir devotes the most attention to it recording six versions of the text The earliest Christian accounts of the treaty were recorded by the Syriac author Dionysius of Tel Mahre and the Melkite patriarch Eutychius of Alexandria 129 The Muslim forces entered similar agreements with nearly all the cities they besieged in Syria including Tiberias Beisan Homs Aleppo Jerusalem as well as Alexandria in Egypt and the cities of Upper Mesopotamia 132 Following his conversion to Islam Khalid was granted a plot of land by the Islamic prophet Muhammad immediately east of the Prophet s Mosque in Medina to build his house which was completed before Muhammad s death 192 It was a small plot a result of his relatively late conversion most available plots had already been granted to earlier converts but after complaining of the size Khalid was permitted by Muhammad to build higher than the other houses in Medina 193 Khalid declared his house a charitable endowment prohibiting his descendants from selling or passing ownership of it 193 In the 12th century Kamal al Din Muhammad al Shahrazuri the head qadi Islamic judge of the Zengid dynasty in Syria purchased and converted Khalid s house in Medina into a ribat charitable house or hospice for men 193 References a b c d e f Hinds 1991 p 138 a b Hinds 1991 pp 137 138 a b c Lammens 1993 p 171 Hinds 1991 p 137 Shaban 1971 pp 23 24 a b Landau Tasseron 1998 pp 202 203 a b c d e f g Lecker 2004 p 694 a b c Robinson 2000 p 782 a b c Hill 1975 p 37 Hill 1975 p 39 Shaban 1971 p 23 a b Watt 1971 p 539 Umari 1991 pp 109 110 Lecker 1989 p 27 note 25 Lecker 1989 p 27 Umari 1991 p 121 a b c Kennedy 2007 p 76 a b c d e f g h i Crone 1978 p 928 a b Kaegi 1995 p 72 a b Kennedy 2007 p 71 Kaegi 1995 pp 71 72 a b Zettersteen 1965 p 235 Powers 2009 p 80 Umari 1991 p 158 Umari 1991 pp 172 173 Watt 1956 p 70 a b c d Vaglieri 1965 p 625 a b Schleifer 1971 p 223 a b Shoufani 1973 pp 48 53 Madelung 1997 p 31 a b Shoufani 1973 p 59 Shoufani 1973 pp 77 78 Shoufani 1973 pp 72 73 Lecker 2004 p 692 a b c d e f g Watt 1960 p 110 Kennedy 2004 p 55 a b c d e f g Lecker 2004 p 693 Shoufani 1973 pp 110 111 a b c Kister 2002 p 44 a b c d Shaban 1971 p 24 Shoufani 1973 pp 79 80 117 118 a b Shoufani 1973 p 118 a b Bosworth 1960 p 1358 Shoufani 1973 p 120 a b c Landau Tasseron 1991 p 267 a b Kister 2002 pp 44 45 a b Landau Tasseron 1991 p 268 Madelung 1997 p 50 note 60 Watt 1956 p 139 Kister 2002 p 7 Kister 2002 pp 7 13 17 Kister 2002 pp 22 23 Kister 2002 pp 7 9 28 29 Kister 2002 p 23 Kister 2002 pp 23 25 Kister 2002 p 29 Kister 2002 p 33 a b c Kister 2002 pp 46 47 a b c d Kister 2002 p 47 a b c d e Kister 2002 p 48 Kister 2002 p 4 Shoufani 1973 p 134 Donner 1981 pp 173 174 Athamina 1994 pp 253 254 a b c Athamina 1994 p 255 Donner 1981 pp 178 179 Donner 1981 p 178 a b Kennedy 2007 p 104 Donner 1981 pp 174 177 a b c d e f Donner 1981 p 179 Pourshariati 2008 p 190 a b c d e f g Donner 1981 p 180 a b c Kennedy 2007 p 105 Kennedy 2007 pp 104 105 Watt 1960 p 111 Donner 1981 p 300 note 68 Donner 1981 pp 181 182 Donner 1981 p 183 Donner 1981 p 181 Donner 1981 p 182 Donner 1981 p 184 a b Donner 1981 p 185 Athamina 1994 p 254 Donner 1981 p 176 Athamina 1994 pp 254 255 Madelung 1997 pp 45 46 a b Blankinship 1993 p 1 note 2 a b Lynch 2013 p 29 note 5 a b Humphreys 1990 p 72 note 124 Donner 1981 p 125 a b Donner 1981 p 126 Donner 1981 p 189 a b c Donner 1981 pp 185 186 a b Donner 1981 pp 186 187 Donner 1981 p 187 Donner 1981 p 310 note 155 a b Donner 1981 p 121 a b c d e f Kennedy 2007 p 75 a b Donner 1981 pp 121 126 Donner 1981 pp 121 122 a b c d Donner 1981 p 122 Donner 1981 pp 120 122 a b c Donner 1981 p 123 a b Gil 1997 pp 47 48 note 50 a b Lynch 2013 p 29 a b Donner 1981 pp 124 125 Donner 1981 p 114 Athamina 1994 pp 257 258 Donner 1981 pp 125 126 a b Donner 1981 p 111 Athamina 1994 pp 255 256 Athamina 1994 p 256 Athamina 1994 p 257 Donner 1981 p 120 a b c Kennedy 2007 p 77 a b Donner 1981 p 124 Kennedy 2007 p 77 78 Donner 1981 p 129 a b Donner 1981 pp 129 130 a b Kennedy 2007 p 78 Donner 1981 p 130 a b c d e Kennedy 2007 p 79 a b c d e f g Elisseeff 1965 p 279 a b Donner 1981 p 132 Kennedy 2007 pp 79 80 a b c Kennedy 2007 p 80 Elisseeff 1965 pp 279 280 Zein amp El Wakil 2020 pp 6 7 Zein amp El Wakil 2020 pp 2 3 a b Zein amp El Wakil 2020 pp 33 34 a b Elisseeff 1965 p 280 Zein amp El Wakil 2020 pp 25 27 30 Donner 1981 pp 131 132 a b c d e f g h i Kaegi 2002 p 291 Jandora 1985 p 14 a b Donner 1981 p 133 Jandora 1985 pp 13 14 Jandora 1985 p 10 a b Kaegi 2002 p 290 a b c d e f Jandora 1985 p 19 Jandora 1985 pp 15 16 19 Kaegi 1995 p 121 a b Jandora 1985 pp 16 19 Jandora 1985 pp 17 18 Jandora 1985 pp 19 20 Jandora 1985 p 20 Jandora 1985 p 8 a b c Athamina 1994 p 261 Athamina 1994 p 259 a b Athamina 1994 p 269 a b Athamina 1994 p 260 Athamina 1994 p 260 note 38 a b Athamina 1994 p 262 Athamina 1994 pp 262 263 Athamina 1994 pp 265 267 Athamina 1994 pp 266 267 Athamina 1994 pp 265 267 a b Kennedy 2007 p 85 a b c Kennedy 2007 p 86 Donner 1981 pp 149 150 a b Donner 1981 p 149 a b Friedmann 1992 p 178 a b Kennedy 2007 p 87 Elisseeff 1986 p 124 Friedmann 1992 p 180 Juynboll 1989 pp 105 106 Donner 1981 p 150 Donner 1981 p 151 Kennedy 2007 p 92 note 52 Juynboll 1989 p 106 Juynboll 1989 p 107 Juynboll 1989 pp 107 108 Juynboll 1989 p 108 Athamina 1994 pp 268 269 Athamina 1994 pp 269 270 Madelung 1997 p 61 note 10 Madelung 1997 pp 60 61 Zettersteen 1965 p 236 a b c d e Blackburn 2005 p 75 note 195 a b c Athamina 1994 p 270 Kennedy 2007 pp 75 76 a b Hillenbrand 1999 p 230 Kennedy 2007 p 81 Mulder 2014 pp 92 93 Landau Tasseron 1998 p 291 Della Vida 1978 p 1106 a b c Hinds 1991 p 139 Blankinship 1993 p 90 note 498 Hinds 1991 pp 139 140 Jankowiak 2013 p 265 Elad 2016 p 289 Lecker 2019 pp 68 70 a b c Lecker 2019 p 71 De Slane 1842 pp 155 157 158 Lammens 1993 p 172 Blackburn 2005 p 76 note 197 Blackburn 2005 p 76 a b c Sirriya 1979 p 116 Sirriya 1979 p 121 note 28 BibliographyAthamina Khalil 1994 The Appointment and Dismissal of Khalid b al Walid from the Supreme Command A Study of the Political Strategy of the Early Muslim Caliphs in Syria Arabica 41 2 253 272 doi 10 1163 157005894X00191 JSTOR 4057449 Blackburn Richard 2005 Journey to the Sublime Porte The Arabic Memoir of a Sharifian Agent s Diplomatic Mission to the Ottoman Imperial Court in the Era of Suleyman the Magnificent the Relevant Text from Quṭb al Din al Nahrawali s al Fawa id al saniyah fi al riḥlah al 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Conquests How the Spread of Islam Changed the World We Live In Philadelphia Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0 306 81585 0 Kister M J 2002 The Struggle against Musaylima and the Conquest of Yamama Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam 27 1 56 Lammens Henri 1993 1927 Makhzum In Houtsma M Th Wensinck A J Levi Provencal E Gibb H A R Heffening W eds E J Brill s First Encyclopaedia of Islam 1913 1936 Volume 5 L Moriscos Reprint ed Leiden New York and Koln E J Brill pp 171 172 ISBN 90 04 09791 0 Landau Tasseron Ella 1991 Malik b Nuwayra 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 267 269 ISBN 978 90 04 08112 3 Landau Tasseron Ella ed 1998 The History of al Ṭabari Volume XXXIX Biographies of the Prophet s Companions and their Successors al Ṭabari s Supplement to his History SUNY Series in Near Eastern Studies Albany New York State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 7914 2819 1 Lecker Michael 1989 The Estates of Amr b al Aṣ in Palestine Notes on a New Negev Arabic Inscription Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies University of London 52 1 24 37 doi 10 1017 S0041977X00023041 JSTOR 617911 S2CID 163092638 Lecker Michael 2004 Al Ridda In Bearman P J Bianquis Th Bosworth C E van Donzel E amp Heinrichs W P eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Volume XII Supplement Leiden E J Brill pp 692 695 ISBN 978 90 04 13974 9 Lecker Michael 2019 The Houses of Khalid ibn al Walid and ʿAmr ibn al ʿAs Near the Prophet s Mosque In Peleg Barkat Orit Ashkenazi Jacob Leibner Uzi Aviam Mordechai Talgam Rina eds Between Sea and Desert On Kings Nomads Cities and Monks Essays in Honor of Joseph Patrich Jerusalem Ostracon pp 67 73 ISBN 978 965 92534 2 5 Lynch Ryan J 2013 Linking Information Creating a Legend The Desert March of Khalid b al Walid Lights The MESSA Journal of the University of Chicago 2 2 28 41 Madelung Wilferd 1997 The Succession to Muhammad A Study of the Early Caliphate Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 56181 7 Mulder Stephennie 2014 Seeing the Light Enacting the Divine at Three Medieval Syrian Shrines In Roxburgh David J ed Envisioning Islamic Art and Architecture Essays in Honor of Renata Holod Leiden and Boston Brill pp 88 108 ISBN 978 90 04 26402 1 Pourshariati Parvaneh 2008 Decline and Fall of the Sasanian Empire The Sasanian Parthian Confederacy and the Arab Conquest of Iran London and New York I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 84511 645 3 Powers David S 2009 Muhammad Is Not the Father of Any of Your Men The Making of the Last Prophet Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0 8122 4178 5 Robinson C F 2000 Uḥud In Bearman P J Bianquis Th Bosworth C E van Donzel E amp Heinrichs W P eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Volume X T U Leiden E J Brill pp 782 783 ISBN 978 90 04 11211 7 Schleifer J 1971 Banuʾl Ḥarith b Kaʿb In Lewis B Menage V L Pellat Ch amp Schacht J eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Volume III H Iram Leiden E J Brill p 223 OCLC 495469525 Shaban M A 1971 Islamic History A New Interpretation Volume 1 A D 600 750 A H 132 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 08137 5 Shoufani Elias S 1973 Al Riddah and the Muslim Conquest of Arabia Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 0 8020 1915 3 Sirriya Elizabeth 1979 Ziyarat of Syria in a Riḥla of Abd al Ghani al Nabulusi 1050 1641 1143 1731 The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland 111 2 109 122 doi 10 1017 s0035869x00135543 S2CID 163434595 Umari Akram Diya 1991 Madinan Society at the Time of the Prophet Volume II The Jihad against the Mushrikun Translated by Huda Khattab Herndon Virginia The International Institute of Islamic Thought ISBN 0 912463 37 6 Vaglieri L V 1965 Dumat al Djandal In Lewis B Pellat Ch amp Schacht J eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Volume II C G Leiden E J Brill p 624 626 OCLC 495469475 Watt W Montgomery 1956 Muhammad at Medina Oxford Clarendon Press OCLC 3456619 Watt W Montgomery 1960 Abu Bakr 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 109 111 OCLC 495469456 Watt W Montgomery 1971 Al Ḥudaybiya In Lewis B Menage V L Pellat Ch amp Schacht J eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Volume III H Iram Leiden E J Brill p 539 OCLC 495469525 Zein Ibrahim El Wakil Ahmed 2020 Khalid b al Walid s Treaty with the People of Damascus Identifying the Source Document through Shared and Competing Historical Memories Journal of Islamic Studies 31 3 295 328 doi 10 1093 jis etaa029 Zettersteen K V 1965 K h alid b al Walid b al Mughira al Makhzumi In Gibb H A R Kramers J H eds Shorter Encyclopaedia of Islam Cornell Cornell University Press pp 235 236 OCLC 609717677 Further readingKaegi Walter E 1991 Khalid In Kazhdan Alexander ed The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 504652 8 Lynch Ryan J 2018 Khalid b al Walid In Nicholson Oliver ed The Oxford Dictionary of Late Antiquity Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 866277 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Khalid ibn al Walid amp oldid 1136564853, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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