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Marwan I

Marwan ibn al-Hakam ibn Abi al-As ibn Umayya (Arabic: مروان بن الحكم بن أبي العاص بن أمية, romanized: Marwān ibn al-Ḥakam ibn Abī al-ʿĀṣ ibn Umayya), commonly known as Marwan I (623 or 626 – April/May 685), was the fourth Umayyad caliph, ruling for less than a year in 684–685. He founded the Marwanid ruling house of the Umayyad dynasty, which replaced the Sufyanid house after its collapse in the Second Muslim Civil War and remained in power until 750.

Marwan I
مروان
Khalīfah
Amir al-Mu'minin
4th Caliph of the Umayyad Caliphate
ReignJune 684 – April/May 685
PredecessorMu'awiya II
SuccessorAbd al-Malik
Born623 or 626
DiedApril/May 685 (aged 59–63)
Damascus or al-Sinnabra
Spouse
  • ʿĀʾisha bint Muʿāwiya ibn al-Mughīra
  • Laylā bint Zabbān ibn al-Asbagh
  • Qutayya bint Bishr
  • Umm Abān al-Kubra bint ʿUthmān ibn ʿAffān
  • Zaynab bint ʿUmar al-Makhzumīyya
  • Umm Hāshim Fākhita
Issue
List
Names
Abū ʿAbd al-Malik Marwān ibn al-Ḥakam ibn Abī al-ʿAs ibn Umayya ibn ʿAbd Shams[1]
HouseMarwanid
DynastyUmayyad
FatherAl-Ḥakam ibn Abī al-ʿAs
MotherĀmina bint ʿAlqama al-Kinānīyya
ReligionIslam

During the reign of his cousin Uthman (r. 644–656), Marwan took part in a military campaign against the Byzantines of the Exarchate of Africa (in central North Africa), where he acquired significant war spoils. He also served as Uthman's governor in Fars (southwestern Iran) before becoming the caliph's katib (secretary or scribe). He was wounded fighting the rebel siege of Uthman's house, in which the caliph was slain. In the ensuing civil war between Ali (r. 656–661) and the largely Qurayshite partisans of A'isha, Marwan sided with the latter at the Battle of the Camel. Marwan later served as governor of Medina under his distant kinsman Caliph Mu'awiya I (r. 661–680), founder of the Umayyad Caliphate. During the reign of Mu'awiya's son and successor Yazid I (r. 680–683), Marwan organized the defense of the Umayyad realm in the Hejaz (western Arabia) against the local opposition. After Yazid died in November 683, the Mecca-based rebel Abd Allah ibn al-Zubayr declared himself caliph and expelled Marwan, who took refuge in Syria, the center of Umayyad rule. With the death of the last Sufyanid caliph Mu'awiya II in 684, Marwan, encouraged by the ex-governor of Iraq Ubayd Allah ibn Ziyad, volunteered his candidacy for the caliphate during a summit of pro-Umayyad tribes in Jabiya. The tribal nobility, led by Ibn Bahdal of the Banu Kalb, elected Marwan and together they defeated the pro-Zubayrid Qays tribes at the Battle of Marj Rahit in August of that year.

In the months that followed, Marwan reasserted Umayyad rule over Egypt, Palestine, and northern Syria, whose governors had defected to Ibn al-Zubayr's cause, while keeping the Qays in check in the Jazira (Upper Mesopotamia). He dispatched an expedition led by Ibn Ziyad to reconquer Zubayrid Iraq, but died while it was underway in the spring of 685. Before his death, Marwan firmly established his sons in positions of power: Abd al-Malik was designated his successor, Abd al-Aziz was made governor of Egypt, and Muhammad oversaw military command in Upper Mesopotamia. Although Marwan was stigmatized as an outlaw and a father of tyrants in later anti-Umayyad tradition, the historian Clifford E. Bosworth asserts that the caliph was a shrewd, capable, and decisive military leader and statesman who laid the foundations of continued Umayyad rule for a further sixty-five years.

Early life and family

 
Family tree of the Umayyad clan and dynasty. Marwan and the line of caliphs descended from him are highlighted in blue, the Sufyanid caliphs in yellow and Caliph Uthman in green

Marwan was born in 2 or 4 AH (623 or 626 CE).[2] His father was al-Hakam ibn Abi al-As of the Banu Umayya (Umayyads), the strongest clan of the Quraysh, a polytheistic tribe which dominated the town of Mecca in the Hejaz.[2][3] The Quraysh converted to Islam en masse in c. 630 following the conquest of Mecca by the Islamic prophet Muhammad, himself a member of the Quraysh.[4] Marwan knew Muhammad and is thus counted among the latter's sahaba (companions).[2] Marwan's mother was Amina bint Alqama of the Kinana,[2] the ancestral tribe of the Quraysh which dominated the area stretching southwest from Mecca to the Tihama coastline.[5]

Marwan had at least sixteen children, among them at least twelve sons from five wives and an umm walad (concubine).[6] From his wife A'isha, a daughter of his paternal first cousin Mu'awiya ibn al-Mughira, he had his eldest son Abd al-Malik, Mu'awiya and daughter Umm Amr.[6][7] Umm Amr later married Sa'id ibn Khalid ibn Amr, a great-grandson of Marwan's paternal first cousin Uthman ibn Affan, who became caliph (leader of the Muslim community) in 644.[8] Marwan's wife Layla bint Zabban ibn al-Asbagh of the Banu Kalb tribe bore him Abd al-Aziz and daughter Umm Uthman,[6] who was married to Caliph Uthman's son al-Walid; al-Walid was also married at one point to Marwan's daughter Umm Amr.[7] Another of Marwan's wives, Qutayya bint Bishr of the Banu Kilab, bore him Bishr and Abd al-Rahman, the latter of whom died young.[6][7] One of Marwan's wives, Umm Aban al-Kubra, was a daughter of Caliph Uthman.[6] She was mother to six of his sons, Aban, Uthman, Ubayd Allah, Ayyub, Dawud and Abd Allah, though the last of them died a child.[6][9] Marwan was married to Zaynab bint Umar, a granddaughter of Abu Salama from the Banu Makhzum, who mothered his son Umar.[6][10] Marwan's umm walad was also named Zaynab and gave birth to his son Muhammad.[6] Marwan had ten brothers and was the paternal uncle of ten nephews.[11]

Secretary of Uthman

During the reign of Caliph Uthman (r. 644–656), Marwan took part in a military campaign against the Byzantines of the Exarchate of Carthage (in central North Africa), where he acquired significant war spoils.[2][12] These likely formed the basis of Marwan's substantial wealth, part of which he invested in properties in Medina,[2] the capital of the Caliphate. At an undetermined point, he served as Uthman's governor in Fars (southwestern Iran) before becoming the caliph's katib (secretary or scribe) and possibly the overseer of Medina's treasury.[2][13] According to the historian Clifford E. Bosworth, in this capacity Marwan "doubtless helped" in the revision "of what became the canonical text of the Qur'an" in Uthman's reign.[2]

The historian Hugh N. Kennedy asserts that Marwan was the caliph's "right-hand man".[14] According to the traditional Muslim reports, many of Uthman's erstwhile backers among the Quraysh gradually withdrew their support as a result of Marwan's pervasive influence, which they blamed for the caliph's controversial decisions.[13][15][16] The historian Fred Donner questions the veracity of these reports, citing the unlikelihood that Uthman would be highly influenced by a younger relative such as Marwan and the rarity of specific charges against the latter, and describes them as a possible "attempt by later Islamic tradition to salvage Uthman's reputation as one of the so-called 'rightly-guided' (rāshidūn) caliphs by making Marwan ... the fall guy for the unhappy events at the end of Uthman's twelve-year reign."[13]

Discontent over Uthman's nepotistic policies and confiscation of the former Sasanian crown lands in Iraq[a] drove the Quraysh and the dispossessed elites of Kufa and Egypt to oppose the caliph.[18] In early 656, rebels from Egypt and Kufa entered Medina to press Uthman to reverse his policies.[19] Marwan recommended a violent response against them.[20] Instead, Uthman entered into a settlement with the Egyptians, the largest and most outspoken group among the mutineers.[21] On their return to Egypt, the rebels intercepted a letter in Uthman's name to Egypt's governor, Ibn Abi Sarh, instructing him to take action against the rebels.[21] In reaction, the Egyptians marched back to Medina and besieged Uthman in his home in June 656.[21] Uthman claimed to have been unaware of the letter, and it may have been authored by Marwan without Uthman's knowledge.[21] Despite orders to the contrary,[22] Marwan actively defended Uthman's house and was badly wounded in the neck when he challenged the rebels assembled at its entrance.[2][13][23] According to tradition, he was saved by the intervention of his wet nurse, Fatima bint Aws, and was transported to the safety of her home by his mawla (freedman or client), Abu Hafs al-Yamani.[23] Shortly after, Uthman was assassinated by the rebels,[21] which became one of the major contributing factors to the First Muslim Civil War.[24] After the assassination, Marwan and other Umayyads fled to Mecca.[25] Calls for avenging Uthman's death were led by the Umayyads, one of Muhammad's wives, A'isha, and two of his prominent companions, Talha ibn Ubayd Allah and Zubayr ibn al-Awwam. Punishing Uthman's murderers became a rallying cry of the opposition to his successor, Ali ibn Abi Talib, a cousin and son-in-law of Muhammad.[26]

Role in the First Fitna

In the ensuing hostilities between Ali and the largely Qurayshite partisans of A'isha, Marwan sided with the latter.[2] He fought alongside A'isha's forces at the Battle of the Camel near Basra in December 656.[2] The historian Leone Caetani presumed that Marwan was the organizer of A'isha's strategy there.[27] The modern historian Laura Veccia Vaglieri notes that while Caetani's "theory is attractive", there is no information in the traditional sources to confirm it and should Marwan have been A'isha's war adviser "he operated so discreetly that the sources hardly speak of his actions."[27]

According to one version in the Islamic tradition, Marwan used the occasion of the battle to kill a partisan of A'isha, Talha, whom he held especially responsible for instigating Uthman's death.[2] Marwan had fired an arrow at Talha, which struck the sciatic vein below his knee, as their troops fell back in a hand-to-hand fight with Ali's soldiers.[28] The historian Wilferd Madelung notes that Marwan "evidently" waited to kill Talha when A'isha appeared close to defeat and thus in a weak position to call Marwan to account for his action.[28] Another version in the tradition attributes Talha's death to Ali's supporters during Talha's retreat from the field,[29] and Caetani dismisses Marwan's culpability as a fabrication by the generally anti-Umayyad sources.[30] Madelung holds that Marwan's slaying of Talha is corroborated by Umayyad propaganda in the 680s heralding him as the first person to take revenge for Uthman's death by killing Talha.[30]

After the battle ended with Ali's victory, Marwan pledged his allegiance to him.[2] Ali pardoned him and Marwan left for Syria, where his distant cousin Mu'awiya ibn Abi Sufyan, who refused allegiance to Ali, was governor.[31] Marwan was present alongside Mu'awiya at the Battle of Siffin near Raqqa in 657,[32] which ended in a stalemate with Ali's army and abortive arbitration talks to settle the civil war.[33]

Governor of Medina

 
A general view of Medina (pictured in 1913), where Marwan spent much of his career, first as a top aide of Caliph Uthman and later as governor for Caliph Mu'awiya I and leader of the Umayyad clan

Ali was assassinated by a member of the Kharijites, a sect opposed to both Ali and Mu'awiya, in January 661.[34] His son and successor Hasan ibn Ali abdicated in a peace treaty with Mu'awiya, who entered Hasan's and formerly Ali's capital at Kufa and gained recognition as caliph there in July or September, marking the establishment of the Umayyad Caliphate.[34][35] Marwan served as Mu'awiya's governor in Bahrayn (eastern Arabia) before serving two stints as governor of Medina in 661–668 and 674–677.[2] In between those two terms, Marwan's Umayyad kinsmen Sa'id ibn al-As and al-Walid ibn Utba ibn Abi Sufyan held the post.[2] Medina had lost its status as the political center of the Caliphate in the aftermath of Uthman's assassination. Under Mu'awiya the capital shifted to Damascus.[36] Although it was reduced to a provincial governorship, Medina remained a hub of Arab culture and Islamic scholarship and home of the traditional Islamic aristocracy.[37] The old elites in Medina, including most of the Umayyad family, resented their loss of power to Mu'awiya; in the summation of the historian Julius Wellhausen, "of what consequence was Marwan, formerly the all-powerful imperial chancellor of Uthman, now as Emir of Medina! No wonder he cast envious looks at his cousin of Damascus who had so far outstripped him."[38]

During his first term, Marwan acquired from Mu'awiya a large estate in the Fadak oasis in northwestern Arabia, which he then bestowed on his sons Abd al-Malik and Abd al-Aziz.[2] Marwan's first dismissal from the governorship caused him to travel to Mu'awiya's court for an explanation from the caliph, who listed three reasons: Marwan's refusal to confiscate for Mu'awiya the properties of their relative Abd Allah ibn Amir after the latter's dismissal from the governorship of Basra; Marwan's criticism of the caliph's adoption of the fatherless Ziyad ibn Abihi, Ibn Amir's successor in Basra, as the son of his father Abu Sufyan, which the Umayyad family disputed; and Marwan's refusal to assist the caliph's daughter Ramla in a domestic dispute with her husband, Amr ibn Uthman ibn Affan.[39] In 670, Marwan led Umayyad opposition to the attempted burial of Hasan ibn Ali beside the grave of Muhammad, compelling Hasan's brother, Husayn, and his clan, the Banu Hashim, to abandon their original funeral arrangement and bury Hasan in the Baqi cemetery instead.[40] Afterward, Marwan participated in the funeral and eulogized Hasan as one "whose forbearance weighed mountains".[41]

According to Bosworth, Mu'awiya may have been suspicious of the ambitions of Marwan and the Abu al-As line of the Banu Umayya in general, which was significantly more numerous than the Abu Sufyan (Sufyanid) line to which Mu'awiya belonged.[11] Marwan was among the eldest and most prestigious Umayyads at a time when there were few experienced Sufyanids of mature age.[11] Bosworth speculates that it "may have been fears of the family of Abu'l-ʿĀs that impelled Muʿāwiya to his adoption of his putative half-brother Ziyād b. Sumayya [Ziyad ibn Abihi] and to the unusual step of naming his own son Yazīd as heir to the caliphate during his own lifetime".[11][b] Marwan had earlier pressed Uthman's son Amr to claim the caliphate based on the legitimacy of his father, a member of the Abu al-As branch, but Amr was uninterested.[44] Marwan reluctantly accepted Mu'awiya's nomination of Yazid in 676, but quietly encouraged another son of Uthman, Sa'id, to contest the succession.[45] Sa'id's ambitions were neutralized when the caliph gave him military command in Khurasan, the easternmost region of the Caliphate.[46]

Leader of the Umayyads in Medina

After Mu'awiya died in 680, Husayn ibn Ali, Abd Allah ibn al-Zubayr and Abd Allah ibn Umar, all sons of prominent Qurayshite companions of Muhammad with their own claims to the caliphate,[47] continued to refuse allegiance to Mu'awiya's chosen successor Yazid.[48] Marwan, the leader of the Umayyad clan in the Hejaz,[49] advised al-Walid ibn Utba, then governor of Medina, to coerce Husayn and Ibn al-Zubayr, both of whom he considered especially dangerous to Umayyad rule, to accept the caliph's sovereignty.[50] Husayn answered al-Walid's summons, but withheld his recognition of Yazid, offering instead to make the pledge in public.[51] Al-Walid accepted, prompting Marwan, who attended the meeting, to castigate the governor and demand Husayn's detention until he proffered the oath of allegiance to Yazid or his execution should he refuse.[52] Husayn then cursed Marwan and left the meeting,[52] eventually making his way toward Kufa to lead a rebellion against the Umayyads.[53] He was slain by Yazid's forces at the Battle of Karbala in October 680.[54]

Meanwhile, Ibn al-Zubayr avoided al-Walid's summons and escaped to Mecca, where he rallied opposition to Yazid from his headquarters in the Ka'aba, Islam's holiest sanctuary where violence was traditionally banned.[55] In the Islamic traditional anecdotes relating Yazid's response, Marwan warns Ibn al-Zubayr not to submit to the caliph;[56] Wellhausen considers these variable traditions to be unreliable.[54] In 683, the people of Medina rebelled against the caliph and assaulted the local Umayyads and their supporters, prompting them to take refuge in Marwan's houses in the city's suburbs where they were besieged.[57][58] In response to Marwan's plea for assistance,[57] Yazid dispatched an expeditionary force of Syrian tribesmen led by Muslim ibn Uqba to assert Umayyad authority over the region.[11] The Umayyads of Medina were afterward expelled and many, including Marwan and the Abu al-As family, joined Ibn Uqba's expedition.[11] In the ensuing Battle of al-Harra in August 683, Marwan led his horsemen through Medina and launched a rear assault against the Medinese defenders fighting Ibn Uqba in the city's eastern outskirts.[59] Despite its victory over the Medinese, Yazid's army retreated to Syria in the wake of the caliph's death in November.[49] On the Syrians' departure, Ibn al-Zubayr declared himself caliph and soon gained recognition in most of the Caliphate's provinces, including Egypt, Iraq and Yemen.[60] Marwan and the Umayyads of the Hejaz were expelled for a second time by Ibn al-Zubayr's partisans and their properties were confiscated.[11]

Caliphate

Accession

 
Marwan was elected by the Syrian tribal nobility to succeed his Umayyad kinsmen as caliph in Damascus (pictured in 1895)

By early 684, Marwan was in Syria, either at Palmyra or in the court of Yazid's young son and successor, Mu'awiya II, in Damascus.[11] The latter died several weeks into his reign without designating a successor.[61] The governors of the Syrian junds (military districts) of Palestine, Homs and Qinnasrin subsequently gave their allegiance to Ibn al-Zubayr.[11] As a result, Marwan "despaired over any future for the Umayyads as rulers", according to Bosworth, and was prepared to recognize Ibn al-Zubayr's legitimacy.[11] However, he was encouraged by the expelled governor of Iraq, Ubayd Allah ibn Ziyad, to volunteer himself as Mu'awiya II's successor during a summit of loyalist Syrian Arab tribes being held in Jabiya.[11] The bids for leadership of the Muslim community exposed the conflict between three developing principles of succession.[62] The general recognition of Ibn al-Zubayr adhered to the Islamic principle of passing leadership to the most righteous and eminent Muslim,[62] while the Umayyad loyalists at the Jabiya summit debated the two other principles: direct hereditary succession as introduced by Mu'awiya I and represented by the nomination of his adolescent grandson Khalid ibn Yazid; and the Arab tribal norm of selecting the wisest and most capable member of a tribe's leading clan, epitomized in this case by Marwan.[63]

The organizer of the Jabiya summit, Ibn Bahdal, the chieftain of the powerful Banu Kalb tribe and maternal cousin of Yazid,[49] supported Khalid's nomination.[11][14] Most of the other chieftains, led by Rawh ibn Zinba of the Judham and Husayn ibn Numayr of the Kinda,[11] opted for Marwan, citing his mature age, political acumen and military experience, over Khalid's youth and inexperience.[64] The 9th-century historian al-Ya'qubi quotes Rawh heralding Marwan: "People of Syria! This is Marwān b. al-Ḥakam, the chief of Quraysh, who avenged the blood of ʿUthmān and fought ʿAlī b. Abī Ṭālib at the Battle of the Camel and Ṣiffīn."[65] A consensus was ultimately reached on 22 June 684 (29 Shawwal 64 AH), whereby Marwan would accede to the caliphate,[66] followed by Khalid and then Amr ibn Sa'id ibn al-As, another prominent young Umayyad.[11] In exchange for backing Marwan, the loyalist Syrian tribes, who shortly thereafter became known as the "Yaman" faction (see below), were promised financial compensation.[14] The Yamani ashraf (tribal nobility) demanded from Marwan the same courtly and military privileges they held under the previous Umayyad caliphs.[67] Husayn ibn Numayr had attempted to reach a similar arrangement with Ibn al-Zubayr, who publicly rejected the terms.[68] In contrast, Marwan "realized the importance of the Syrian troops and adhered wholeheartedly to their demands", according to the historian Mohammad Rihan.[69] In the summation of Kennedy, "Marwān had no experience or contacts in Syria; he would be entirely dependent on the ashrāf from the Yamanī tribes who had elected him."[14]

Campaigns to reassert Umayyad rule

 
Map of the political division of the Caliphate during the Second Muslim Civil War about 686. The area shaded in red represents the approximate territory reconquered by the Umayyads during the less-than-one-year reign of Marwan.

In opposition to the Kalb, the pro-Zubayrid Qaysi tribes objected to Marwan's accession and beckoned al-Dahhak ibn Qays al-Fihri, the governor of Damascus, to mobilize for war; accordingly, al-Dahhak and the Qays set up camp in the Marj Rahit plain north of Damascus.[14] Most of the Syrian junds backed Ibn al-Zubayr, with the exception of Jordan, whose dominant tribe was the Kalb.[69] With the critical support of the Kalb and its allied tribes, Marwan marched against al-Dahhak's larger army, while in Damascus city, a Ghassanid nobleman expelled al-Dahhak's partisans and brought the city under Marwan's authority.[14] In August, Marwan's forces routed the Qays and killed al-Dahhak at the Battle of Marj Rahit.[11][14] Marwan's rise had affirmed the power of the Quda'a tribal confederation, of which the Kalb was part,[70] and after the battle, it formed an alliance with the Qahtan confederation of Homs, forming the new super-tribe of Yaman.[71] The crushing Umayyad–Yamani victory at Marj Rahit led to the long-running Qays–Yaman blood feud.[72] The remnants of Qays rallied around Zufar ibn al-Harith al-Kilabi, who took over the fortress of Qarqisiya (Circesium) in Upper Mesopotamia, from which he led the tribal opposition to the Umayyads.[14] In a poem attributed to him, Marwan thanked the Yamani tribes for their support at Marj Rahit:

When I saw that the affair would be one of plunder, I made ready Ghassan and Kalb against them [the Qays],
And the Saksakīs [Kindites], men who would triumph, and Ṭayyi', who would insist on the striking of blows,
And the Qayn who would come weighed down with arms, and of Tanūkh a difficult and lofty peak.
[The enemy] will not seize the kingship unless by force, and if Qays approach, say, Keep away![73]

Although he was already recognized by the loyalist tribes at Jabiya, Marwan received ceremonial oaths of allegiance as caliph in Damascus in July or August.[66] He wed Yazid's widow and mother of Khalid, Umm Hashim Fakhita, thereby establishing a political link with the Sufyanids.[11] Wellhausen viewed the marriage as an attempt by Marwan to seize the inheritance of Yazid by becoming stepfather to his sons.[74] Marwan appointed the Ghassanid Yahya ibn Qays as the head of his shurta (security forces) and his own mawla Abu Sahl al-Aswad as his hajib (chamberlain).[75]

Despite his victory at Marj Rahit and the consolidation of Umayyad power in central Syria, Marwan's authority was not recognized in the rest of the Umayyads' former domains; with the help of Ibn Ziyad and Ibn Bahdal, Marwan undertook to restore Umayyad rule across the Caliphate with "energy and determination", according to Kennedy.[72] To Palestine he dispatched Rawh ibn Zinba, who forced the flight to Mecca of his rival for leadership of the Judham tribe, the pro-Zubayrid governor Natil ibn Qays.[76] Marwan also consolidated Umayyad rule in northern Syria, and the remainder of his reign was marked by attempts to reassert Umayyad authority.[11] By February/March 685, he secured his rule in Egypt with key assistance from the Arab tribal nobility of the provincial capital Fustat.[72] The province's pro-Zubayrid governor, Abd al-Rahman ibn Utba al-Fihri, was expelled and replaced with Marwan's son Abd al-Aziz.[11][72] Afterward, Marwan's forces led by Amr ibn Sa'id repelled a Zubayrid expedition against Palestine launched by Ibn al-Zubayr's brother Mus'ab.[11][77] Marwan dispatched an expedition to the Hejaz led by the Quda'a commander Hubaysh ibn Dulja, which was routed at al-Rabadha east of Medina.[11][76] Meanwhile, Marwan sent his son Muhammad to check the Qaysi tribes in the middle Euphrates region.[72] By early 685, he dispatched an army led by Ibn Ziyad to conquer Iraq from the Zubayrids and the pro-Alids[11] (partisans of Caliph Ali and his household and the forerunners of the Shia sect of Islam).

Death and succession

After a reign of between six and ten months, depending on the source, Marwan died in the spring of 65 AH/685.[11] The precise date of his death is not clear from the medieval sources, with historians Ibn Sa'd, al-Tabari and Khalifa ibn Khayyat placing it on 29 Sha'ban/10 or 11 April, al-Mas'udi on 3 Ramadan/13 April and Elijah of Nisibis on 7 May.[11] Most early Muslim sources hold that Marwan died in Damascus, while al-Mas'udi holds that he died at his winter residence in al-Sinnabra near Lake Tiberias.[11] Although it is widely reported in the traditional Muslim sources that Marwan was killed in his sleep by Umm Hashim Fakhita in retaliation for a serious verbal insult to her honor by the caliph, most western historians dismiss the story.[78] Based on a report by al-Mas'udi,[79] Bosworth and others suspect Marwan succumbed to a plague afflicting Syria at the time of his death.[11]

Upon Marwan's return to Syria from Egypt in 685, he had designated his sons Abd al-Malik and Abd al-Aziz as his successors, in that order. He made the change after he reached al-Sinnabra and was informed that Ibn Bahdal recognized Amr ibn Sa'id as Marwan's successor-in-waiting.[80] He summoned and questioned Ibn Bahdal and ultimately demanded that he give allegiance to Abd al-Malik as his heir apparent.[80] By this, Marwan abrogated the arrangement reached at the Jabiya summit in 684,[11] re-instituting the principle of direct hereditary succession.[81] Abd al-Malik acceded to the caliphate without opposition from the previously designated successors, Khalid ibn Yazid and Amr ibn Sa'id.[11] Thereafter, hereditary succession became the standard practice of the Umayyad caliphs.[81]

Assessment

By making his family the foundation of his power, Marwan modeled his administration on that of Caliph Uthman, who extensively relied on his kinsmen, as opposed to Mu'awiya I, who largely kept them at arm's length.[82] To that end, Marwan ensured Abd al-Malik's succession as caliph and gave his sons Muhammad and Abd al-Aziz key military commands.[82] Despite the tumultuous beginnings, the "Marwanids" (descendants of Marwan) were established as the ruling house of the Umayyad realm.[70][82]

In the view of Bosworth, Marwan "was obviously a military leader and statesman of great skill and decisiveness amply endowed with the qualities of ḥilm [levelheadedness] and shrewdness, which characterised other outstanding members of the Umayyad clan".[11] His rise as caliph in Syria, a largely unfamiliar territory where he lacked a power-base, laid the foundations for Abd al-Malik's reign, which consolidated Umayyad rule for a further sixty-five years.[11] In the view of Madelung, Marwan's path to the caliphate was "truly high politics", the culmination of intrigues dating from his early career.[83] These included encouraging Uthman's empowerment of the Umayyads, becoming the "first avenger" of Uthman's assassination by murdering Talha, and privately undermining while publicly enforcing the authority of the Sufyanid caliphs of Damascus.[83]

Marwan was known to be gruff and lacking in social graces.[11] He suffered permanent injuries after a number of battle wounds.[11] His tall and emaciated appearance lent him the nickname khayt batil (gossamer-like thread).[11] In later anti-Umayyad Muslim tradition, Marwan was derided as tarid ibn tarid (outlawed son of an outlaw) in reference to his father al-Hakam's alleged exile to Ta'if by the Islamic prophet Muhammad and Marwan's expulsion from Medina by Ibn al-Zubayr. He was also referred to as abu al-jababira (father of tyrants) because his son and grandsons later inherited the caliphal throne.[11] In a number of sayings attributed to Muhammad, Marwan and his father are the subject of the Islamic prophet's foreboding, though Donner holds that much of these reports were likely conceived by Shia opponents of Marwan and the Umayyads in general.[84]

A number of reports cited by the medieval Islamic historians al-Baladhuri (d. 892) and Ibn Asakir (d. 1176) are indicative of Marwan's piety, such as the 9th-century historian al-Mada'ini's assertion that Marwan was among the best readers of the Qur'an and Marwan's own claim to have recited the Qur'an for over forty years before the Battle of Marj Rahit.[85] On the basis that many of his sons bore clearly Islamic names (as opposed to traditional Arabian names), Donner speculates Marwan may have indeed been "deeply religious" and "profoundly impressed" by the Qur'anic message to honor God and the prophets of Islam, including Muhammad.[86] Donner notes the difficulty of "achieving a sound assessment of Marwan", as with most Islamic leaders of his generation, due to an absence of archaeological and epigraphic documentation and the restriction of his biographical information to often polemical literary sources.[87]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The crown lands of Iraq were lands abandoned by the Sasanian royal family, the Iranian aristocracy and the Zoroastrian clergy during the Arab conquest of Sasanian Mesopotamia in the 630s. The lands were then designated as common property for the benefit of the Muslims in Kufa and Basra, the chief Arab garrison towns established in Iraq after the conquest. Their confiscation by Caliph Uthman as property of the central treasury in Medina provoked widespread consternation among the early Muslim settlers in Kufa, who derived significant revenue from the lands.[17]
  2. ^ Caliph Mu'awiya I's nomination of his own son Yazid I as his successor had been an unprecedented act in Islamic politics, marking a shift to hereditary rule from the earlier caliphs' elective or consultative form of succession. The move elicited charges in later Islamic tradition that the Umayyads transformed the office of the caliphate into a monarchy.[42][43]

References

  1. ^ Kennedy 2004, p. 397.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Bosworth 1991, p. 621.
  3. ^ Della Vida & Bosworth 2000, p. 838.
  4. ^ Donner 1981, p. 77.
  5. ^ Watt 1986, p. 116.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Donner 2014, p. 110.
  7. ^ a b c Ahmed 2010, p. 111.
  8. ^ Ahmed 2010, pp. 119–120.
  9. ^ Ahmed 2010, p. 114.
  10. ^ Ahmed 2010, p. 90.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag Bosworth 1991, p. 622.
  12. ^ Madelung 1997, p. 81.
  13. ^ a b c d Donner 2014, p. 106.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h Kennedy 2004, p. 91.
  15. ^ Madelung 1997, p. 92.
  16. ^ Della Vida & Khoury 2000, p. 947.
  17. ^ Kennedy 2004, pp. 68, 73.
  18. ^ Madelung 1997, pp. 86–89.
  19. ^ Hinds 1972, pp. 457–459.
  20. ^ Madelung 1997, pp. 127, 135.
  21. ^ a b c d e Hinds 1972, p. 457.
  22. ^ Madelung 1997, p. 136.
  23. ^ a b Madelung 1997, p. 137.
  24. ^ Wellhausen 1927, pp. 50–51.
  25. ^ Anthony 2011, p. 112.
  26. ^ Wellhausen 1927, pp. 52–53, 55–56.
  27. ^ a b Vaglieri 1965, p. 416.
  28. ^ a b Madelung 1997, p. 171.
  29. ^ Landau-Tasseron 1998, pp. 27–28, note 126.
  30. ^ a b Madelung 2000, p. 162.
  31. ^ Madelung 1997, pp. 181, 190, 192 note 232, 196.
  32. ^ Madelung 1997, pp. 235–236.
  33. ^ Kennedy 2004, pp. 77–80.
  34. ^ a b Hinds 1993, p. 265.
  35. ^ Wellhausen 1927, pp. 104, 111.
  36. ^ Wellhausen 1927, pp. 59–60, 161.
  37. ^ Wellhausen 1927, pp. 136, 161.
  38. ^ Wellhausen 1927, p. 136.
  39. ^ Madelung 1997, pp. 343–345.
  40. ^ Madelung 1997, p. 332.
  41. ^ Madelung 1997, p. 333.
  42. ^ Kennedy 2004, p. 88.
  43. ^ Hawting 2000, pp. 13–14, 43.
  44. ^ Madelung 1997, pp. 341–342.
  45. ^ Madelung 1997, pp. 342–343.
  46. ^ Madelung 1997, p. 343.
  47. ^ Howard 1990, p. 2, note 11.
  48. ^ Wellhausen 1927, pp. 142, 144–145.
  49. ^ a b c Kennedy 2004, p. 90.
  50. ^ Wellhausen 1927, pp. 145–146.
  51. ^ Howard 1990, pp. 4–5.
  52. ^ a b Howard 1990, p. 5.
  53. ^ Wellhausen 1927, p. 146.
  54. ^ a b Wellhausen 1927, p. 147.
  55. ^ Wellhausen 1927, pp. 147–148.
  56. ^ Wellhausen 1927, p. 148.
  57. ^ a b Wellhausen 1927, p. 154.
  58. ^ Vaglieri 1971, p. 226.
  59. ^ Vaglieri 1971, p. 227.
  60. ^ Gibb 1960, p. 55.
  61. ^ Duri 2011, p. 23.
  62. ^ a b Duri 2011, pp. 23–24.
  63. ^ Duri 2011, pp. 23–25.
  64. ^ Duri 2011, pp. 24–25.
  65. ^ Biesterfeldt & Günther 2018, p. 952.
  66. ^ a b Wellhausen 1927, p. 182.
  67. ^ Rihan 2014, p. 103.
  68. ^ Rihan 2014, pp. 103–104.
  69. ^ a b Rihan 2014, p. 104.
  70. ^ a b Cobb 2001, p. 69.
  71. ^ Cobb 2001, pp. 69–70.
  72. ^ a b c d e Kennedy 2004, p. 92.
  73. ^ Hawting 1989, pp. 60–61.
  74. ^ Madelung 1997, p. 349.
  75. ^ Biesterfeldt & Günther 2018, p. 954.
  76. ^ a b Biesterfeldt & Günther 2018, p. 953.
  77. ^ Wellhausen 1927, p. 185.
  78. ^ Madelung 1997, p. 351.
  79. ^ Madelung 1997, p. 352.
  80. ^ a b Mayer 1952, p. 185.
  81. ^ a b Duri 2011, p. 25.
  82. ^ a b c Kennedy 2004, p. 93.
  83. ^ a b Madelung 1997, pp. 348–349.
  84. ^ Donner 2014, pp. 106–107.
  85. ^ Donner 2014, pp. 108, 114 notes 23–26.
  86. ^ Donner 2014, pp. 110–111.
  87. ^ Donner 2014, p. 105.

Sources

Marwan I
Born: c. 623 or 626 Died: April/May 685
Preceded by Caliph of Islam
Umayyad Caliph

June 684 – April/May 685
Succeeded by
Political offices
Vacant
Title last held by
Abu Ayyub al-Ansari
Governor of Medina
661–668
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Sa'id ibn al-As
Governor of Medina
674–677
Succeeded by

marwan, marwan, hakam, umayya, arabic, مروان, بن, الحكم, بن, أبي, العاص, بن, أمية, romanized, marwān, Ḥakam, abī, ʿĀṣ, umayya, commonly, known, april, fourth, umayyad, caliph, ruling, less, than, year, founded, marwanid, ruling, house, umayyad, dynasty, which,. Marwan ibn al Hakam ibn Abi al As ibn Umayya Arabic مروان بن الحكم بن أبي العاص بن أمية romanized Marwan ibn al Ḥakam ibn Abi al ʿAṣ ibn Umayya commonly known as Marwan I 623 or 626 April May 685 was the fourth Umayyad caliph ruling for less than a year in 684 685 He founded the Marwanid ruling house of the Umayyad dynasty which replaced the Sufyanid house after its collapse in the Second Muslim Civil War and remained in power until 750 Marwan I مروانKhalifahAmir al Mu minin4th Caliph of the Umayyad CaliphateReignJune 684 April May 685PredecessorMu awiya IISuccessorAbd al MalikBorn623 or 626DiedApril May 685 aged 59 63 Damascus or al SinnabraSpouseʿAʾisha bint Muʿawiya ibn al MughiraLayla bint Zabban ibn al AsbaghQutayya bint BishrUmm Aban al Kubra bint ʿUthman ibn ʿAffanZaynab bint ʿUmar al MakhzumiyyaUmm Hashim FakhitaIssueList ʿAbd al MalikʿAbd al ʿAzizMuʿawiyaBishrAbanʿUthmanʿUbayd AllahAyyubDawudʿUmarMuḥammadNamesAbu ʿAbd al Malik Marwan ibn al Ḥakam ibn Abi al ʿAs ibn Umayya ibn ʿAbd Shams 1 HouseMarwanidDynastyUmayyadFatherAl Ḥakam ibn Abi al ʿAsMotherAmina bint ʿAlqama al KinaniyyaReligionIslamDuring the reign of his cousin Uthman r 644 656 Marwan took part in a military campaign against the Byzantines of the Exarchate of Africa in central North Africa where he acquired significant war spoils He also served as Uthman s governor in Fars southwestern Iran before becoming the caliph s katib secretary or scribe He was wounded fighting the rebel siege of Uthman s house in which the caliph was slain In the ensuing civil war between Ali r 656 661 and the largely Qurayshite partisans of A isha Marwan sided with the latter at the Battle of the Camel Marwan later served as governor of Medina under his distant kinsman Caliph Mu awiya I r 661 680 founder of the Umayyad Caliphate During the reign of Mu awiya s son and successor Yazid I r 680 683 Marwan organized the defense of the Umayyad realm in the Hejaz western Arabia against the local opposition After Yazid died in November 683 the Mecca based rebel Abd Allah ibn al Zubayr declared himself caliph and expelled Marwan who took refuge in Syria the center of Umayyad rule With the death of the last Sufyanid caliph Mu awiya II in 684 Marwan encouraged by the ex governor of Iraq Ubayd Allah ibn Ziyad volunteered his candidacy for the caliphate during a summit of pro Umayyad tribes in Jabiya The tribal nobility led by Ibn Bahdal of the Banu Kalb elected Marwan and together they defeated the pro Zubayrid Qays tribes at the Battle of Marj Rahit in August of that year In the months that followed Marwan reasserted Umayyad rule over Egypt Palestine and northern Syria whose governors had defected to Ibn al Zubayr s cause while keeping the Qays in check in the Jazira Upper Mesopotamia He dispatched an expedition led by Ibn Ziyad to reconquer Zubayrid Iraq but died while it was underway in the spring of 685 Before his death Marwan firmly established his sons in positions of power Abd al Malik was designated his successor Abd al Aziz was made governor of Egypt and Muhammad oversaw military command in Upper Mesopotamia Although Marwan was stigmatized as an outlaw and a father of tyrants in later anti Umayyad tradition the historian Clifford E Bosworth asserts that the caliph was a shrewd capable and decisive military leader and statesman who laid the foundations of continued Umayyad rule for a further sixty five years Contents 1 Early life and family 2 Secretary of Uthman 2 1 Role in the First Fitna 3 Governor of Medina 4 Leader of the Umayyads in Medina 5 Caliphate 5 1 Accession 5 2 Campaigns to reassert Umayyad rule 5 3 Death and succession 6 Assessment 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 SourcesEarly life and family Edit Family tree of the Umayyad clan and dynasty Marwan and the line of caliphs descended from him are highlighted in blue the Sufyanid caliphs in yellow and Caliph Uthman in green Marwan was born in 2 or 4 AH 623 or 626 CE 2 His father was al Hakam ibn Abi al As of the Banu Umayya Umayyads the strongest clan of the Quraysh a polytheistic tribe which dominated the town of Mecca in the Hejaz 2 3 The Quraysh converted to Islam en masse in c 630 following the conquest of Mecca by the Islamic prophet Muhammad himself a member of the Quraysh 4 Marwan knew Muhammad and is thus counted among the latter s sahaba companions 2 Marwan s mother was Amina bint Alqama of the Kinana 2 the ancestral tribe of the Quraysh which dominated the area stretching southwest from Mecca to the Tihama coastline 5 Marwan had at least sixteen children among them at least twelve sons from five wives and an umm walad concubine 6 From his wife A isha a daughter of his paternal first cousin Mu awiya ibn al Mughira he had his eldest son Abd al Malik Mu awiya and daughter Umm Amr 6 7 Umm Amr later married Sa id ibn Khalid ibn Amr a great grandson of Marwan s paternal first cousin Uthman ibn Affan who became caliph leader of the Muslim community in 644 8 Marwan s wife Layla bint Zabban ibn al Asbagh of the Banu Kalb tribe bore him Abd al Aziz and daughter Umm Uthman 6 who was married to Caliph Uthman s son al Walid al Walid was also married at one point to Marwan s daughter Umm Amr 7 Another of Marwan s wives Qutayya bint Bishr of the Banu Kilab bore him Bishr and Abd al Rahman the latter of whom died young 6 7 One of Marwan s wives Umm Aban al Kubra was a daughter of Caliph Uthman 6 She was mother to six of his sons Aban Uthman Ubayd Allah Ayyub Dawud and Abd Allah though the last of them died a child 6 9 Marwan was married to Zaynab bint Umar a granddaughter of Abu Salama from the Banu Makhzum who mothered his son Umar 6 10 Marwan s umm walad was also named Zaynab and gave birth to his son Muhammad 6 Marwan had ten brothers and was the paternal uncle of ten nephews 11 Secretary of Uthman EditDuring the reign of Caliph Uthman r 644 656 Marwan took part in a military campaign against the Byzantines of the Exarchate of Carthage in central North Africa where he acquired significant war spoils 2 12 These likely formed the basis of Marwan s substantial wealth part of which he invested in properties in Medina 2 the capital of the Caliphate At an undetermined point he served as Uthman s governor in Fars southwestern Iran before becoming the caliph s katib secretary or scribe and possibly the overseer of Medina s treasury 2 13 According to the historian Clifford E Bosworth in this capacity Marwan doubtless helped in the revision of what became the canonical text of the Qur an in Uthman s reign 2 The historian Hugh N Kennedy asserts that Marwan was the caliph s right hand man 14 According to the traditional Muslim reports many of Uthman s erstwhile backers among the Quraysh gradually withdrew their support as a result of Marwan s pervasive influence which they blamed for the caliph s controversial decisions 13 15 16 The historian Fred Donner questions the veracity of these reports citing the unlikelihood that Uthman would be highly influenced by a younger relative such as Marwan and the rarity of specific charges against the latter and describes them as a possible attempt by later Islamic tradition to salvage Uthman s reputation as one of the so called rightly guided rashidun caliphs by making Marwan the fall guy for the unhappy events at the end of Uthman s twelve year reign 13 Discontent over Uthman s nepotistic policies and confiscation of the former Sasanian crown lands in Iraq a drove the Quraysh and the dispossessed elites of Kufa and Egypt to oppose the caliph 18 In early 656 rebels from Egypt and Kufa entered Medina to press Uthman to reverse his policies 19 Marwan recommended a violent response against them 20 Instead Uthman entered into a settlement with the Egyptians the largest and most outspoken group among the mutineers 21 On their return to Egypt the rebels intercepted a letter in Uthman s name to Egypt s governor Ibn Abi Sarh instructing him to take action against the rebels 21 In reaction the Egyptians marched back to Medina and besieged Uthman in his home in June 656 21 Uthman claimed to have been unaware of the letter and it may have been authored by Marwan without Uthman s knowledge 21 Despite orders to the contrary 22 Marwan actively defended Uthman s house and was badly wounded in the neck when he challenged the rebels assembled at its entrance 2 13 23 According to tradition he was saved by the intervention of his wet nurse Fatima bint Aws and was transported to the safety of her home by his mawla freedman or client Abu Hafs al Yamani 23 Shortly after Uthman was assassinated by the rebels 21 which became one of the major contributing factors to the First Muslim Civil War 24 After the assassination Marwan and other Umayyads fled to Mecca 25 Calls for avenging Uthman s death were led by the Umayyads one of Muhammad s wives A isha and two of his prominent companions Talha ibn Ubayd Allah and Zubayr ibn al Awwam Punishing Uthman s murderers became a rallying cry of the opposition to his successor Ali ibn Abi Talib a cousin and son in law of Muhammad 26 Role in the First Fitna Edit In the ensuing hostilities between Ali and the largely Qurayshite partisans of A isha Marwan sided with the latter 2 He fought alongside A isha s forces at the Battle of the Camel near Basra in December 656 2 The historian Leone Caetani presumed that Marwan was the organizer of A isha s strategy there 27 The modern historian Laura Veccia Vaglieri notes that while Caetani s theory is attractive there is no information in the traditional sources to confirm it and should Marwan have been A isha s war adviser he operated so discreetly that the sources hardly speak of his actions 27 According to one version in the Islamic tradition Marwan used the occasion of the battle to kill a partisan of A isha Talha whom he held especially responsible for instigating Uthman s death 2 Marwan had fired an arrow at Talha which struck the sciatic vein below his knee as their troops fell back in a hand to hand fight with Ali s soldiers 28 The historian Wilferd Madelung notes that Marwan evidently waited to kill Talha when A isha appeared close to defeat and thus in a weak position to call Marwan to account for his action 28 Another version in the tradition attributes Talha s death to Ali s supporters during Talha s retreat from the field 29 and Caetani dismisses Marwan s culpability as a fabrication by the generally anti Umayyad sources 30 Madelung holds that Marwan s slaying of Talha is corroborated by Umayyad propaganda in the 680s heralding him as the first person to take revenge for Uthman s death by killing Talha 30 After the battle ended with Ali s victory Marwan pledged his allegiance to him 2 Ali pardoned him and Marwan left for Syria where his distant cousin Mu awiya ibn Abi Sufyan who refused allegiance to Ali was governor 31 Marwan was present alongside Mu awiya at the Battle of Siffin near Raqqa in 657 32 which ended in a stalemate with Ali s army and abortive arbitration talks to settle the civil war 33 Governor of Medina Edit A general view of Medina pictured in 1913 where Marwan spent much of his career first as a top aide of Caliph Uthman and later as governor for Caliph Mu awiya I and leader of the Umayyad clan Ali was assassinated by a member of the Kharijites a sect opposed to both Ali and Mu awiya in January 661 34 His son and successor Hasan ibn Ali abdicated in a peace treaty with Mu awiya who entered Hasan s and formerly Ali s capital at Kufa and gained recognition as caliph there in July or September marking the establishment of the Umayyad Caliphate 34 35 Marwan served as Mu awiya s governor in Bahrayn eastern Arabia before serving two stints as governor of Medina in 661 668 and 674 677 2 In between those two terms Marwan s Umayyad kinsmen Sa id ibn al As and al Walid ibn Utba ibn Abi Sufyan held the post 2 Medina had lost its status as the political center of the Caliphate in the aftermath of Uthman s assassination Under Mu awiya the capital shifted to Damascus 36 Although it was reduced to a provincial governorship Medina remained a hub of Arab culture and Islamic scholarship and home of the traditional Islamic aristocracy 37 The old elites in Medina including most of the Umayyad family resented their loss of power to Mu awiya in the summation of the historian Julius Wellhausen of what consequence was Marwan formerly the all powerful imperial chancellor of Uthman now as Emir of Medina No wonder he cast envious looks at his cousin of Damascus who had so far outstripped him 38 During his first term Marwan acquired from Mu awiya a large estate in the Fadak oasis in northwestern Arabia which he then bestowed on his sons Abd al Malik and Abd al Aziz 2 Marwan s first dismissal from the governorship caused him to travel to Mu awiya s court for an explanation from the caliph who listed three reasons Marwan s refusal to confiscate for Mu awiya the properties of their relative Abd Allah ibn Amir after the latter s dismissal from the governorship of Basra Marwan s criticism of the caliph s adoption of the fatherless Ziyad ibn Abihi Ibn Amir s successor in Basra as the son of his father Abu Sufyan which the Umayyad family disputed and Marwan s refusal to assist the caliph s daughter Ramla in a domestic dispute with her husband Amr ibn Uthman ibn Affan 39 In 670 Marwan led Umayyad opposition to the attempted burial of Hasan ibn Ali beside the grave of Muhammad compelling Hasan s brother Husayn and his clan the Banu Hashim to abandon their original funeral arrangement and bury Hasan in the Baqi cemetery instead 40 Afterward Marwan participated in the funeral and eulogized Hasan as one whose forbearance weighed mountains 41 According to Bosworth Mu awiya may have been suspicious of the ambitions of Marwan and the Abu al As line of the Banu Umayya in general which was significantly more numerous than the Abu Sufyan Sufyanid line to which Mu awiya belonged 11 Marwan was among the eldest and most prestigious Umayyads at a time when there were few experienced Sufyanids of mature age 11 Bosworth speculates that it may have been fears of the family of Abu l ʿAs that impelled Muʿawiya to his adoption of his putative half brother Ziyad b Sumayya Ziyad ibn Abihi and to the unusual step of naming his own son Yazid as heir to the caliphate during his own lifetime 11 b Marwan had earlier pressed Uthman s son Amr to claim the caliphate based on the legitimacy of his father a member of the Abu al As branch but Amr was uninterested 44 Marwan reluctantly accepted Mu awiya s nomination of Yazid in 676 but quietly encouraged another son of Uthman Sa id to contest the succession 45 Sa id s ambitions were neutralized when the caliph gave him military command in Khurasan the easternmost region of the Caliphate 46 Leader of the Umayyads in Medina EditAfter Mu awiya died in 680 Husayn ibn Ali Abd Allah ibn al Zubayr and Abd Allah ibn Umar all sons of prominent Qurayshite companions of Muhammad with their own claims to the caliphate 47 continued to refuse allegiance to Mu awiya s chosen successor Yazid 48 Marwan the leader of the Umayyad clan in the Hejaz 49 advised al Walid ibn Utba then governor of Medina to coerce Husayn and Ibn al Zubayr both of whom he considered especially dangerous to Umayyad rule to accept the caliph s sovereignty 50 Husayn answered al Walid s summons but withheld his recognition of Yazid offering instead to make the pledge in public 51 Al Walid accepted prompting Marwan who attended the meeting to castigate the governor and demand Husayn s detention until he proffered the oath of allegiance to Yazid or his execution should he refuse 52 Husayn then cursed Marwan and left the meeting 52 eventually making his way toward Kufa to lead a rebellion against the Umayyads 53 He was slain by Yazid s forces at the Battle of Karbala in October 680 54 Meanwhile Ibn al Zubayr avoided al Walid s summons and escaped to Mecca where he rallied opposition to Yazid from his headquarters in the Ka aba Islam s holiest sanctuary where violence was traditionally banned 55 In the Islamic traditional anecdotes relating Yazid s response Marwan warns Ibn al Zubayr not to submit to the caliph 56 Wellhausen considers these variable traditions to be unreliable 54 In 683 the people of Medina rebelled against the caliph and assaulted the local Umayyads and their supporters prompting them to take refuge in Marwan s houses in the city s suburbs where they were besieged 57 58 In response to Marwan s plea for assistance 57 Yazid dispatched an expeditionary force of Syrian tribesmen led by Muslim ibn Uqba to assert Umayyad authority over the region 11 The Umayyads of Medina were afterward expelled and many including Marwan and the Abu al As family joined Ibn Uqba s expedition 11 In the ensuing Battle of al Harra in August 683 Marwan led his horsemen through Medina and launched a rear assault against the Medinese defenders fighting Ibn Uqba in the city s eastern outskirts 59 Despite its victory over the Medinese Yazid s army retreated to Syria in the wake of the caliph s death in November 49 On the Syrians departure Ibn al Zubayr declared himself caliph and soon gained recognition in most of the Caliphate s provinces including Egypt Iraq and Yemen 60 Marwan and the Umayyads of the Hejaz were expelled for a second time by Ibn al Zubayr s partisans and their properties were confiscated 11 Caliphate EditAccession Edit Marwan was elected by the Syrian tribal nobility to succeed his Umayyad kinsmen as caliph in Damascus pictured in 1895 By early 684 Marwan was in Syria either at Palmyra or in the court of Yazid s young son and successor Mu awiya II in Damascus 11 The latter died several weeks into his reign without designating a successor 61 The governors of the Syrian junds military districts of Palestine Homs and Qinnasrin subsequently gave their allegiance to Ibn al Zubayr 11 As a result Marwan despaired over any future for the Umayyads as rulers according to Bosworth and was prepared to recognize Ibn al Zubayr s legitimacy 11 However he was encouraged by the expelled governor of Iraq Ubayd Allah ibn Ziyad to volunteer himself as Mu awiya II s successor during a summit of loyalist Syrian Arab tribes being held in Jabiya 11 The bids for leadership of the Muslim community exposed the conflict between three developing principles of succession 62 The general recognition of Ibn al Zubayr adhered to the Islamic principle of passing leadership to the most righteous and eminent Muslim 62 while the Umayyad loyalists at the Jabiya summit debated the two other principles direct hereditary succession as introduced by Mu awiya I and represented by the nomination of his adolescent grandson Khalid ibn Yazid and the Arab tribal norm of selecting the wisest and most capable member of a tribe s leading clan epitomized in this case by Marwan 63 The organizer of the Jabiya summit Ibn Bahdal the chieftain of the powerful Banu Kalb tribe and maternal cousin of Yazid 49 supported Khalid s nomination 11 14 Most of the other chieftains led by Rawh ibn Zinba of the Judham and Husayn ibn Numayr of the Kinda 11 opted for Marwan citing his mature age political acumen and military experience over Khalid s youth and inexperience 64 The 9th century historian al Ya qubi quotes Rawh heralding Marwan People of Syria This is Marwan b al Ḥakam the chief of Quraysh who avenged the blood of ʿUthman and fought ʿAli b Abi Ṭalib at the Battle of the Camel and Ṣiffin 65 A consensus was ultimately reached on 22 June 684 29 Shawwal 64 AH whereby Marwan would accede to the caliphate 66 followed by Khalid and then Amr ibn Sa id ibn al As another prominent young Umayyad 11 In exchange for backing Marwan the loyalist Syrian tribes who shortly thereafter became known as the Yaman faction see below were promised financial compensation 14 The Yamani ashraf tribal nobility demanded from Marwan the same courtly and military privileges they held under the previous Umayyad caliphs 67 Husayn ibn Numayr had attempted to reach a similar arrangement with Ibn al Zubayr who publicly rejected the terms 68 In contrast Marwan realized the importance of the Syrian troops and adhered wholeheartedly to their demands according to the historian Mohammad Rihan 69 In the summation of Kennedy Marwan had no experience or contacts in Syria he would be entirely dependent on the ashraf from the Yamani tribes who had elected him 14 Campaigns to reassert Umayyad rule Edit Map of the political division of the Caliphate during the Second Muslim Civil War about 686 The area shaded in red represents the approximate territory reconquered by the Umayyads during the less than one year reign of Marwan In opposition to the Kalb the pro Zubayrid Qaysi tribes objected to Marwan s accession and beckoned al Dahhak ibn Qays al Fihri the governor of Damascus to mobilize for war accordingly al Dahhak and the Qays set up camp in the Marj Rahit plain north of Damascus 14 Most of the Syrian junds backed Ibn al Zubayr with the exception of Jordan whose dominant tribe was the Kalb 69 With the critical support of the Kalb and its allied tribes Marwan marched against al Dahhak s larger army while in Damascus city a Ghassanid nobleman expelled al Dahhak s partisans and brought the city under Marwan s authority 14 In August Marwan s forces routed the Qays and killed al Dahhak at the Battle of Marj Rahit 11 14 Marwan s rise had affirmed the power of the Quda a tribal confederation of which the Kalb was part 70 and after the battle it formed an alliance with the Qahtan confederation of Homs forming the new super tribe of Yaman 71 The crushing Umayyad Yamani victory at Marj Rahit led to the long running Qays Yaman blood feud 72 The remnants of Qays rallied around Zufar ibn al Harith al Kilabi who took over the fortress of Qarqisiya Circesium in Upper Mesopotamia from which he led the tribal opposition to the Umayyads 14 In a poem attributed to him Marwan thanked the Yamani tribes for their support at Marj Rahit When I saw that the affair would be one of plunder I made ready Ghassan and Kalb against them the Qays And the Saksakis Kindites men who would triumph and Ṭayyi who would insist on the striking of blows And the Qayn who would come weighed down with arms and of Tanukh a difficult and lofty peak The enemy will not seize the kingship unless by force and if Qays approach say Keep away 73 Although he was already recognized by the loyalist tribes at Jabiya Marwan received ceremonial oaths of allegiance as caliph in Damascus in July or August 66 He wed Yazid s widow and mother of Khalid Umm Hashim Fakhita thereby establishing a political link with the Sufyanids 11 Wellhausen viewed the marriage as an attempt by Marwan to seize the inheritance of Yazid by becoming stepfather to his sons 74 Marwan appointed the Ghassanid Yahya ibn Qays as the head of his shurta security forces and his own mawla Abu Sahl al Aswad as his hajib chamberlain 75 Despite his victory at Marj Rahit and the consolidation of Umayyad power in central Syria Marwan s authority was not recognized in the rest of the Umayyads former domains with the help of Ibn Ziyad and Ibn Bahdal Marwan undertook to restore Umayyad rule across the Caliphate with energy and determination according to Kennedy 72 To Palestine he dispatched Rawh ibn Zinba who forced the flight to Mecca of his rival for leadership of the Judham tribe the pro Zubayrid governor Natil ibn Qays 76 Marwan also consolidated Umayyad rule in northern Syria and the remainder of his reign was marked by attempts to reassert Umayyad authority 11 By February March 685 he secured his rule in Egypt with key assistance from the Arab tribal nobility of the provincial capital Fustat 72 The province s pro Zubayrid governor Abd al Rahman ibn Utba al Fihri was expelled and replaced with Marwan s son Abd al Aziz 11 72 Afterward Marwan s forces led by Amr ibn Sa id repelled a Zubayrid expedition against Palestine launched by Ibn al Zubayr s brother Mus ab 11 77 Marwan dispatched an expedition to the Hejaz led by the Quda a commander Hubaysh ibn Dulja which was routed at al Rabadha east of Medina 11 76 Meanwhile Marwan sent his son Muhammad to check the Qaysi tribes in the middle Euphrates region 72 By early 685 he dispatched an army led by Ibn Ziyad to conquer Iraq from the Zubayrids and the pro Alids 11 partisans of Caliph Ali and his household and the forerunners of the Shia sect of Islam Death and succession Edit After a reign of between six and ten months depending on the source Marwan died in the spring of 65 AH 685 11 The precise date of his death is not clear from the medieval sources with historians Ibn Sa d al Tabari and Khalifa ibn Khayyat placing it on 29 Sha ban 10 or 11 April al Mas udi on 3 Ramadan 13 April and Elijah of Nisibis on 7 May 11 Most early Muslim sources hold that Marwan died in Damascus while al Mas udi holds that he died at his winter residence in al Sinnabra near Lake Tiberias 11 Although it is widely reported in the traditional Muslim sources that Marwan was killed in his sleep by Umm Hashim Fakhita in retaliation for a serious verbal insult to her honor by the caliph most western historians dismiss the story 78 Based on a report by al Mas udi 79 Bosworth and others suspect Marwan succumbed to a plague afflicting Syria at the time of his death 11 Upon Marwan s return to Syria from Egypt in 685 he had designated his sons Abd al Malik and Abd al Aziz as his successors in that order He made the change after he reached al Sinnabra and was informed that Ibn Bahdal recognized Amr ibn Sa id as Marwan s successor in waiting 80 He summoned and questioned Ibn Bahdal and ultimately demanded that he give allegiance to Abd al Malik as his heir apparent 80 By this Marwan abrogated the arrangement reached at the Jabiya summit in 684 11 re instituting the principle of direct hereditary succession 81 Abd al Malik acceded to the caliphate without opposition from the previously designated successors Khalid ibn Yazid and Amr ibn Sa id 11 Thereafter hereditary succession became the standard practice of the Umayyad caliphs 81 Assessment EditBy making his family the foundation of his power Marwan modeled his administration on that of Caliph Uthman who extensively relied on his kinsmen as opposed to Mu awiya I who largely kept them at arm s length 82 To that end Marwan ensured Abd al Malik s succession as caliph and gave his sons Muhammad and Abd al Aziz key military commands 82 Despite the tumultuous beginnings the Marwanids descendants of Marwan were established as the ruling house of the Umayyad realm 70 82 In the view of Bosworth Marwan was obviously a military leader and statesman of great skill and decisiveness amply endowed with the qualities of ḥilm levelheadedness and shrewdness which characterised other outstanding members of the Umayyad clan 11 His rise as caliph in Syria a largely unfamiliar territory where he lacked a power base laid the foundations for Abd al Malik s reign which consolidated Umayyad rule for a further sixty five years 11 In the view of Madelung Marwan s path to the caliphate was truly high politics the culmination of intrigues dating from his early career 83 These included encouraging Uthman s empowerment of the Umayyads becoming the first avenger of Uthman s assassination by murdering Talha and privately undermining while publicly enforcing the authority of the Sufyanid caliphs of Damascus 83 Marwan was known to be gruff and lacking in social graces 11 He suffered permanent injuries after a number of battle wounds 11 His tall and emaciated appearance lent him the nickname khayt batil gossamer like thread 11 In later anti Umayyad Muslim tradition Marwan was derided as tarid ibn tarid outlawed son of an outlaw in reference to his father al Hakam s alleged exile to Ta if by the Islamic prophet Muhammad and Marwan s expulsion from Medina by Ibn al Zubayr He was also referred to as abu al jababira father of tyrants because his son and grandsons later inherited the caliphal throne 11 In a number of sayings attributed to Muhammad Marwan and his father are the subject of the Islamic prophet s foreboding though Donner holds that much of these reports were likely conceived by Shia opponents of Marwan and the Umayyads in general 84 A number of reports cited by the medieval Islamic historians al Baladhuri d 892 and Ibn Asakir d 1176 are indicative of Marwan s piety such as the 9th century historian al Mada ini s assertion that Marwan was among the best readers of the Qur an and Marwan s own claim to have recited the Qur an for over forty years before the Battle of Marj Rahit 85 On the basis that many of his sons bore clearly Islamic names as opposed to traditional Arabian names Donner speculates Marwan may have indeed been deeply religious and profoundly impressed by the Qur anic message to honor God and the prophets of Islam including Muhammad 86 Donner notes the difficulty of achieving a sound assessment of Marwan as with most Islamic leaders of his generation due to an absence of archaeological and epigraphic documentation and the restriction of his biographical information to often polemical literary sources 87 See also EditAl Harith ibn al Hakam brother of Marwan I Yahya ibn al Hakam brother of Marwan I Aban ibn al Walid ibn UqbaNotes Edit The crown lands of Iraq were lands abandoned by the Sasanian royal family the Iranian aristocracy and the Zoroastrian clergy during the Arab conquest of Sasanian Mesopotamia in the 630s The lands were then designated as common property for the benefit of the Muslims in Kufa and Basra the chief Arab garrison towns established in Iraq after the conquest Their confiscation by Caliph Uthman as property of the central treasury in Medina provoked widespread consternation among the early Muslim settlers in Kufa who derived significant revenue from the lands 17 Caliph Mu awiya I s nomination of his own son Yazid I as his successor had been an unprecedented act in Islamic politics marking a shift to hereditary rule from the earlier caliphs elective or consultative form of succession The move elicited charges in later Islamic tradition that the Umayyads transformed the office of the caliphate into a monarchy 42 43 References Edit Kennedy 2004 p 397 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Bosworth 1991 p 621 Della Vida amp Bosworth 2000 p 838 Donner 1981 p 77 Watt 1986 p 116 a b c d e f g h Donner 2014 p 110 a b c Ahmed 2010 p 111 Ahmed 2010 pp 119 120 Ahmed 2010 p 114 Ahmed 2010 p 90 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag Bosworth 1991 p 622 Madelung 1997 p 81 a b c d Donner 2014 p 106 a b c d e f g h Kennedy 2004 p 91 Madelung 1997 p 92 Della Vida amp Khoury 2000 p 947 Kennedy 2004 pp 68 73 Madelung 1997 pp 86 89 Hinds 1972 pp 457 459 Madelung 1997 pp 127 135 a b c d e Hinds 1972 p 457 Madelung 1997 p 136 a b Madelung 1997 p 137 Wellhausen 1927 pp 50 51 Anthony 2011 p 112 Wellhausen 1927 pp 52 53 55 56 a b Vaglieri 1965 p 416 a b Madelung 1997 p 171 Landau Tasseron 1998 pp 27 28 note 126 a b Madelung 2000 p 162 Madelung 1997 pp 181 190 192 note 232 196 Madelung 1997 pp 235 236 Kennedy 2004 pp 77 80 a b Hinds 1993 p 265 Wellhausen 1927 pp 104 111 Wellhausen 1927 pp 59 60 161 Wellhausen 1927 pp 136 161 Wellhausen 1927 p 136 Madelung 1997 pp 343 345 Madelung 1997 p 332 Madelung 1997 p 333 Kennedy 2004 p 88 Hawting 2000 pp 13 14 43 Madelung 1997 pp 341 342 Madelung 1997 pp 342 343 Madelung 1997 p 343 Howard 1990 p 2 note 11 Wellhausen 1927 pp 142 144 145 a b c Kennedy 2004 p 90 Wellhausen 1927 pp 145 146 Howard 1990 pp 4 5 a b Howard 1990 p 5 Wellhausen 1927 p 146 a b Wellhausen 1927 p 147 Wellhausen 1927 pp 147 148 Wellhausen 1927 p 148 a b Wellhausen 1927 p 154 Vaglieri 1971 p 226 Vaglieri 1971 p 227 Gibb 1960 p 55 Duri 2011 p 23 a b Duri 2011 pp 23 24 Duri 2011 pp 23 25 Duri 2011 pp 24 25 Biesterfeldt amp Gunther 2018 p 952 a b Wellhausen 1927 p 182 Rihan 2014 p 103 Rihan 2014 pp 103 104 a b Rihan 2014 p 104 a b Cobb 2001 p 69 Cobb 2001 pp 69 70 a b c d e Kennedy 2004 p 92 Hawting 1989 pp 60 61 Madelung 1997 p 349 Biesterfeldt amp Gunther 2018 p 954 a b Biesterfeldt amp Gunther 2018 p 953 Wellhausen 1927 p 185 Madelung 1997 p 351 Madelung 1997 p 352 a b Mayer 1952 p 185 a b Duri 2011 p 25 a b c Kennedy 2004 p 93 a b Madelung 1997 pp 348 349 Donner 2014 pp 106 107 Donner 2014 pp 108 114 notes 23 26 Donner 2014 pp 110 111 Donner 2014 p 105 Sources EditAhmed Asad Q 2010 The Religious Elite of the Early Islamic Ḥijaz Five Prosopographical Case Studies Oxford University of Oxford Linacre College Unit for Prosopographical Research ISBN 978 1 900934 13 8 Biesterfeldt Hinrich Gunther Sebastian 2018 The Works of Ibn Waḍiḥ al Yaʿqubi Volume 3 An English Translation Leiden E J Brill ISBN 978 90 04 35621 4 Bosworth C E 1991 Marwan I b al Ḥakam 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 621 623 ISBN 978 90 04 08112 3 Cobb Paul M 2001 White Banners Contention in Abbasid Syria 750 880 Albany New York State University of New York Press ISBN 0 7914 4879 7 Della Vida Giorgio Levi amp Bosworth C E 2000 Umayya b ʿAbd Shams 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 837 839 ISBN 978 90 04 11211 7 Della Vida Giorgio Levi amp Khoury Raif Georges 2000 ʿUthman b ʿAffan 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 946 949 ISBN 978 90 04 11211 7 Donner Fred M 1981 The Early Islamic Conquests Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 05327 8 Donner Fred M 2014 Was Marwan ibn al Hakam the First Real Muslim In Savant Sarah Bowen de Felipe Helena eds Genealogy and Knowledge in Muslim Societies Understanding the Past Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press pp 105 114 ISBN 978 0 7486 4497 1 Duri Abd al Aziz 2011 Early Islamic Institutions Administration and Taxation from the Caliphate to the Umayyads and ʿAbbasids Translated by Razia Ali London and Beirut I B Tauris and Centre for Arab Unity Studies ISBN 978 1 84885 060 6 Gibb H A R 1960 ʿAbd Allah ibn al Zubayr 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 54 55 OCLC 495469456 Hawting G R ed 1989 The History of al Ṭabari Volume XX The Collapse of Sufyanid Authority and the Coming of the Marwanids The Caliphates of Muʿawiyah II and Marwan I and the Beginning of the Caliphate of ʿAbd al Malik A D 683 685 A H 64 66 SUNY Series in Near Eastern Studies Albany New York State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 88706 855 3 Hawting Gerald R 2000 The First Dynasty of Islam The Umayyad Caliphate AD 661 750 Second ed London and New York Routledge ISBN 0 415 24072 7 Hinds Martin October 1972 The Murder of the Caliph Uthman International Journal of Middle East Studies 13 4 450 469 doi 10 1017 S0020743800025216 JSTOR 162492 Hinds M 1993 Muʿawiya I b Abi Sufyan In Bosworth C E van Donzel E Heinrichs W P amp Pellat Ch eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Volume VII Mif Naz Leiden E J Brill pp 263 268 ISBN 978 90 04 09419 2 Howard I K A ed 1990 The History of al Ṭabari Volume XIX The Caliphate of Yazid ibn Muʿawiyah A D 680 683 A H 60 64 SUNY Series in Near Eastern Studies Albany New York State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 7914 0040 1 Kennedy Hugh 2004 The Prophet and the Age of the Caliphates The Islamic Near East from the 6th to the 11th Century Second ed Harlow Longman ISBN 978 0 582 40525 7 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 Madelung Wilferd 1997 The Succession to Muhammad A Study of the Early Caliphate Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 56181 7 Madelung W 2000 Ṭalḥa 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 161 162 ISBN 978 90 04 11211 7 Mayer L A 1952 As Sinnabra Israel Exploration Journal 2 3 183 187 JSTOR 27924483 Rihan Mohammad 2014 The Politics and Culture of an Umayyad Tribe Conflict and Factionalism in the Early Islamic Period London and New York I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 78076 564 8 Vaglieri L Veccia 1965 Al Djamal In Lewis B Pellat Ch amp Schacht J eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Volume II C G Leiden E J Brill pp 414 416 OCLC 495469475 Vaglieri L Veccia 1971 Al Ḥarra 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 pp 226 227 OCLC 495469525 Watt W M 1986 Kinana In Bosworth C E van Donzel E Lewis B amp Pellat Ch eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Volume V Khe Mahi Leiden E J Brill p 116 ISBN 978 90 04 07819 2 Wellhausen Julius 1927 The Arab Kingdom and its Fall Translated by Margaret Graham Weir Calcutta University of Calcutta OCLC 752790641 Anthony Sean 25 November 2011 The Caliph and the Heretic Ibn Saba and the Origins of Shi ism BRILL ISBN 978 900420930 5 Marwan IUmayyad dynastyBorn c 623 or 626 Died April May 685Preceded byMu awiya II Caliph of IslamUmayyad CaliphJune 684 April May 685 Succeeded byAbd al MalikPolitical officesVacantTitle last held byAbu Ayyub al Ansari Governor of Medina661 668 Succeeded bySa id ibn al AsPreceded bySa id ibn al As Governor of Medina674 677 Succeeded byAl Walid ibn Utba ibn Abi Sufyan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Marwan I amp oldid 1139497744, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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