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Nizar ibn al-Mustansir

Abu Mansur Nizar ibn al-Mustansir (Arabic: أبو منصور نزار بن المستنصر, romanizedAbū Manṣūr Nizār ibn al-Mustanṣir; 1045–1095) was a Fatimid prince, and the oldest son of the eighth Fatimid caliph and eighteenth Isma'ili imam, al-Mustansir. When his father died in December 1094, the powerful vizier, al-Afdal Shahanshah, raised Nizar's younger brother al-Musta'li to the throne in Cairo, bypassing the claims of Nizar and other older sons of al-Mustansir. Nizar escaped Cairo, rebelled and seized Alexandria, where he reigned as caliph with the regnal name al-Mustafa li-Din Allah (Arabic: المصطفى لدين الله, romanizedal-Muṣṭafā li-Dīn Allāh). In late 1095 he was defeated and taken prisoner to Cairo, where he was executed by immurement.

Nizar ibn al-Mustansir
Gold dinar minted in the name of Nizar at Alexandria in 1095
Born26 September 1045
Cairo, Egypt
Diedc. November/December 1095 (aged 50)
Cairo, Egypt
Cause of deathImmurement
TitleImam of Nizari Isma'ilism
Term1094–1095
Predecessoral-Mustansir Billah
SuccessorAli al-Hadi (in concealment)
Parent
FamilyFatimid dynasty

During the 12th century, some of Nizar's actual or claimed descendants tried, without success, to seize the throne from the Fatimid caliphs. Many Isma'ilis, especially in Persia, rejected al-Musta'li's imamate and considered Nizar as the rightful imam. As a result, they split off from the Fatimid regime and founded the Nizari branch of Isma'ilism, with their own line of imams who claimed descent from Nizar. This line continues to this day in the person of the Aga Khan.

Life edit

Nizar was born on 26 September 1045 (5 Rabīʿ al-ʾAwwal 437 A.H.) to the ruling Fatimid imamcaliph, al-Mustansir (r. 1036–1094).[1] At that time, al-Mustansir was around 15 years old and had already been on the throne for ten years.[2] Nizar was most likely the eldest son of the caliph, although another son named Abu Abdallah is sometimes listed as the senior of al-Mustansir's sons.[a][2]

In the late 1060s, the Fatimid Caliphate entered a profound crisis, with the advance of the Seljuk Turks from the east threatening its hold over Syria, and protracted clashes between the Fatimid army's Turkish and black African troops in Egypt leading to the breakdown of the central government and widespread famine and anarchy.[4] In about 1068, as internal turmoil threatened the dynasty with collapse, al-Mustansir dispersed his sons throughout his territories as a safeguard, keeping only an unnamed underage son close to him. The account by the Mamluk-era historian al-Maqrizi says that Abu Abdallah and Abu Ali were to go to Acre to join the army of the commander Badr al-Jamali; Abu'l-Qasim Muhammad (father of the Caliph al-Hafiz) to Ascalon; while another, unnamed but underage son, remained in Cairo.[5] Nizar is not mentioned by al-Maqrizi, but he was very likely included in this measure,[6] and the al-Hidaya al-Amiriyya, a proclamation issued in 1122 by Caliph al-Amir (r. 1101–1130), claims that he was sent to the port of Damietta.[7] This dispersal of the Fatimid princes lasted at least until Badr al-Jamali assumed power in 1073 as vizier and quasi-dictator and restored order in Egypt.[6][8]

Disputed succession edit

As the oldest son, Nizar was apparently considered to be his father's most likely successor, as was the custom;[9] indeed, historians often state that Nizar had been his father's designated[b] successor.[11][12] However, no formal designation of Nizar as heir seems to have taken place by the time of al-Mustansir's death in December 1094.[9][13]

Al-Maqrizi writes that this was due to the machinations of Badr's son al-Afdal Shahanshah, who had succeeded his father to the vizierate in June 1094.[14] According to al-Maqrizi, a deep-seated enmity existed between al-Afdal and Nizar. An anecdote tells how al-Afdal had once tried to enter the palace on horseback—a privilege reserved for the caliph—whereupon Nizar yelled at him to dismount and called him a "dirty Armenian". Since then, the two had been bitter enemies, with al-Afdal obstructing Nizar's activities and demoting his servants, while at the same time winning the army's commanders over to his cause. Only one of them, the Berber Muhammad ibn Masal al-Lukki, is said to have remained loyal to Nizar, because he had promised to appoint him vizier instead of al-Afdal.[15][16]

According to al-Maqrizi, al-Afdal pressured al-Mustansir to prevent Nizar's public nomination as heir,[15] and when the caliph died, al-Afdal raised a much younger[c] half-brother of Nizar, al-Musta'li, to the throne and the imamate.[d] Al-Musta'li, who had shortly before married al-Afdal's sister, was completely dependent on al-Afdal for his accession. This made him a compliant figurehead who was unlikely to threaten al-Afdal's recent, and therefore as yet fragile, hold on power.[11][24][25]

In order to defend al-Musta'li's succession and counter the claims of Nizar's partisans, al-Mu'stali's son and successor, al-Amir, issued the al-Hidaya al-Amiriyya. This document puts a different spin on the dispersal of the princes: supposedly, they were sent away in order of importance, with those closest to Cairo (and thus the caliph himself) being the highest in rank.[6][7] Modern historians point out that this was a deliberately misconstrued argument, as the princes were sent away for their protection. According to the historian Paul E. Walker, sending Abu Abdallah to the strong army of Badr al-Jamali was, if anything, an indication of his high importance and of his father's desire to keep him safe.[6] At the same time, the unidentified underage son left in Cairo was clearly not al-Musta'li, who had not even been born yet. Walker identifies the unnamed prince with Abu'l-Qasim Ahmad, whose birth had been publicly announced in 1060. That prince had likely died in the meantime, as the future al-Musta'li, born in 1074, was given the same name.[6]

The al-Hidaya al-Amiriyya and other accounts further assert the legitimacy of al-Musta'li's accession by reporting stories that on the wedding banquet of al-Musta'li, or on his deathbed, al-Mustansir had chosen him as his heir, and that one of al-Mustansir's sisters is said to have been called to him privately and received al-Musta'li's nomination as a bequest.[9][26][27] Modern historians, such as Farhad Daftary, believe these stories to be most likely attempts to justify and retroactively legitimize what was in effect a coup d'état by al-Afdal.[11]

However, al-Maqrizi also includes a different narrative that casts doubt on whether al-Afdal's move was really a carefully prepared coup. When al-Afdal summoned three of al-Mustansir's sons—Nizar, Abdallah, and Isma'il, apparently the most prominent among the caliph's progeny—to the palace to do homage to al-Musta'li, who had been seated on the throne, they each refused. Not only did they reject al-Musta'li, but each of them claimed that al-Mustansir had chosen him as his successor. Nizar claimed that he had a written document to this effect.[28][29] This refusal apparently took al-Afdal completely by surprise. The brothers were allowed to leave the palace; but while Abdallah and Isma'il made for a nearby mosque, Nizar immediately fled Cairo.[28][29] To add to the confusion, having learned of al-Mustansir's passing, Baraqat, the chief missionary (da'i) of Cairo (the head of the Isma'ili religious establishment) proclaimed Abdallah as caliph with the regnal name al-Muwaffaq.[30] However, al-Afdal soon regained control. Baraqat was arrested (and later executed), Abdallah and Isma'il were placed under surveillance and eventually publicly acknowledged al-Musta'li. A grand assembly of officials was held, which acclaimed al-Musta'li as imam and caliph.[15]

Rebellion and death edit

In the meantime, Nizar fled to Alexandria with a few followers. The local governor, a Turk named Nasr al-Dawla Aftakin, opposed al-Afdal, so Nizar was quickly able to gain his support. He also won over the local judge (qadi), the inhabitants and the surrounding Arab tribes to his cause. He then rose in revolt and proclaimed himself imam and caliph with the title of al-Mustafa li-Din Allah ('the Chosen One for God's Religion').[1][13][31][32] A gold dinar of Nizar, bearing this title, was discovered in 1994, attesting to his assumption of the caliphal title and the minting of coinage with it.[31] According to Walker, the speed with which Nizar gained support, and some other stories narrated in al-Maqrizi, suggest the existence of a relatively large faction that expected or wanted him to succeed al-Mustansir.[32]

Nizar's revolt was initially successful: al-Afdal's attack on Alexandria in February 1095 was easily repulsed, and Nizar's forces raided up to the outskirts of Cairo. Over the next months, however, al-Afdal managed to win back the allegiance of the Arab tribes with bribes and gifts. Weakened, Nizar's forces were pushed back to Alexandria, which was placed under siege. In November, Nizar's military commander Ibn Masal abandoned the city, taking most of the remaining treasure with him. This forced Aftakin and Nizar to surrender against a guarantee of their safety (aman). Both were taken back to Cairo, where Nizar was immured and Aftakin was executed.[1][13][31][32] The details or exact date of Nizar's death are unknown.[33]

In a surviving letter sent to the Isma'ili Yemeni queen Arwa al-Sulayhi announcing his accession, al-Musta'li gives the "official" version of events as follows: Like the other sons of al-Mustansir, Nizar had at first accepted his imamate and paid him homage, before being moved by greed and envy to revolt. The events up to the capitulation of Alexandria are reported in some detail, but nothing is mentioned of Nizar's fate or that of Aftakin.[34]

Nizari schism edit

Problems with succession arrangements had emerged before, but al-Musta'li's accession was the first time that rival members of the Fatimid dynasty had actually fought over the throne.[35] Given the pivotal role of the imam in the Isma'ili faith, this was of momentous importance: the issue of succession was not merely a matter of political intrigue, but also intensely religious. In the words of the modern pioneer of Isma'ili studies, Samuel Miklos Stern, "on it depended the continuity of institutional religion as well as the personal salvation of the believer".[36] To the Isma'ili faithful, writes Stern, it was "not so much the person of the claimant that weighed with his followers; they were not moved by any superior merits of Nizar as a ruler [...] it was the divine right personified in the legitimate heir that counted".[36]

As a result, the events of 1094–1095 caused a bitter and permanent schism in the Isma'ili movement that continues to the present.[35][37] While al-Musta'li was recognized by the Fatimid elites and the official Isma'ili religious establishment (the da'wa), as well as the Isma'ili communities dependent on it in Syria and Yemen, most of the Isma'ili communities in the wider Middle East, and especially Persia and Iraq, rejected it. Whether out of genuine conviction, or as a convenient excuse to rid himself of Cairo's control, the chief Isma'ili da'i in Persia, Hassan-i Sabbah, swiftly recognized Nizar's rights to the imamate—possibly already during Nizar's rule in Alexandria—severed relations with Cairo, and set up his own independent hierarchy (the da'wa jadida, lit.'new calling'). This marked the permanent and enduring split of the Isma'ili movement into rival "Musta'li" and "Nizari" branches.[33][38][39]

Over the following decades, the Nizaris were among the most bitter enemies of the Musta'li rulers of Egypt.[40] Hassan-i Sabbah founded the Order of Assassins, which was responsible for the assassination of al-Afdal in 1121,[41][42] and of al-Musta'li's son and successor al-Amir (who was also al-Afdal's nephew and son-in-law) in October 1130.[42][43] This led to a succession of coups and crises that heralded the decline of the Fatimid state, and its eventual collapse.[44] In 1130–1131 the Fatimid regime was temporarily abolished by al-Afdal's son Kutayfat, before Nizar's nephew Abd al-Majid, in the absence of a direct heir of al-Amir, assumed the imamate and the caliphate as the caliph al-Hafiz in January 1132.[45][46][47] Al-Hafiz' succession led to another schism in Isma'ilism, between those Musta'lis who accepted al-Hafiz' succession (the "Hafizis") and those who did not, upholding instead the imamate of al-Amir's infant son al-Tayyib (the "Tayyibis").[48][49] Whereas Nizari Isma'ilism survived in Persia and Syria, and Tayyibi Isma'ilism in Yemen and India, the Hafizi sect, closely associated with the Fatimid state, did not long survive the latter's final abolition by Saladin in 1171.[50]

   denotes ruling Fatimid caliphs (with regnal dates)
Source: Daftary, Farhad (2007). The Ismāʿı̄lı̄s: Their History and Doctrines (Second ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 508. ISBN 978-0-521-61636-2.

Descendants and succession edit

Contemporary sources attest that Nizar had a number of sons.[51] At least one of them, al-Husayn, fled with other members of the dynasty (including three of Nizar's brothers, Muhammad, Isma'il, and Tahir) from Egypt to the western Maghreb in 1095, where they formed a sort of opposition in exile to the new regime in Cairo.[13][32] There are indications that another of Nizar's sons, named al-Mukhtar Muhammad, left for Yemen, as coins in his name were minted there.[33] In 1132, following the highly irregular accession of al-Hafiz, al-Husayn tried to return to Egypt. He managed to raise an army, but al-Hafiz successfully suborned his commanders and had him killed.[52][53] In 1149, al-Hafiz had to confront a similar threat by a purported son of Nizar. The pretender managed to recruit a large following among the Berbers, but he was also killed when the Fatimid caliph bribed his commanders.[54][55] The last revolt by a Nizari claimant was by al-Husayn's son Muhammad in 1162, but he was lured with false promises and executed by the vizier Ruzzik ibn Tala'i.[54][56]

None of his sons had been formally designated as successor by Nizar, however, so they lacked the legitimacy to become imams after him. This raised an acute problem for the Nizari faithful, as Isma'ili doctrine held that a line of divinely ordained imams could not possibly be broken.[57] At first, some Nizaris held that Nizar was not dead, but would return as the Islamic messiah, the Mahdi (or at least in his company).[1] In the absence of an imam, coinage from Alamut Castle, the centre of Hassan-i Sabah's nascent Nizari Isma'ili state in central Persia, was minted with Nizar's regnal name of al-Mustafa li-Din Allah until 1162.[33][57] No imam was named publicly at Alamut until then, and Hassan-i Sabbah and his two immediate successors ruled instead as da'is, or as hujjas ('seals', 'proofs'), representatives acting on behalf of the absent imam.[58] However, the Nizaris soon came to believe that a grandson (or son) of Nizar had been smuggled out of Egypt and brought to Alamut, and was the rightful imam, living in concealment (satr).[59][60]

According to Nizari tradition, the fourth ruler of Alamut, Hassan II (r. 1162–1166), is considered to have been no longer a simple da'i, but secretly a descendant of Nizar and the rightful imam, although this claim was not made explicit until the reign of his son, Nur al-Din Muhammad II.[61][62] Modern Nizari tradition holds that three imams—Ali al-Hadi, Muhammad (I) al-Muhtadi, and Hassan (I) al-Qahir[63][64]—ruled after Nizar while in concealment, but various primary sources give different genealogies.[65][64] According to the German scholar of Shi'ism, Heinz Halm, the identities of the three concealed imams are most likely fictional,[64] and the veracity of Hasan II's claims to Fatimid descent remain a major historiographical issue.[66] Nevertheless, Hassan II's successors have sustained their claim of descent from Nizar down to current imam of Nizari Isma'ilism, the Aga Khan.[33][67]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ The long reign of al-Mustansir ensured that he had numerous offspring, but no complete list exists, and many of his sons shared parts of their names, making their identification difficult. Historian Paul E. Walker estimated that al-Mustansir "had at the minimum seventeen sons whose names we can recover".[3]
  2. ^ The concept of designation (nass) is central to the early Shi'a, and particularly the Isma'ili, concept of the imamate, but it also presented complications: as the imam possessed God's infallibility (isma), he could not possibly err, especially in the selection of his heir. Appointed heirs predeceasing their fathers were a source of considerable embarrassment, and therefore, while an heir might be clearly favoured during his father's reign, nass was often withheld until shortly before the ruling imam's death, proclaimed in the latter's testament, or left as a bequest with a third party.[10]
  3. ^ Al-Musta'li was apparently the youngest of all of al-Mustansir's sons.[9][6]
  4. ^ An imam is a spiritual leader of the Islamic community of the faithful (ummah) as successor of Muhammad.[17] After the civil wars of the early Muslim period, the Sunni mainstream followed the caliphs as successors of Muhammad and attached few conditions to leadership positions.[18][19] On the other hand, the Shi'a gradually developed the notion of the imam as a singular, divinely invested and guided successor of Muhammad, a figure endowed with unique qualities and the living proof (hujja) of God. The position was reserved for a member of the family of Muhammad, with Muhammad's son-in-law Ali ibn Abi Talib considered as the first such imam.[20][21] The Twelver Shi'a and Isma'ili (or Sevener) branches split after the death of Ja'far al-Sadiq in 765. The Twelvers followed Musa al-Kadhim as their seventh imam and end the line of their imams with al-Mahdi, the twelfth and final imam who went into occultation in 874 and whose messianic return is still awaited.[22] The various Isma'ili branches follow the line of succession from Isma'il ibn Jafar through a continuous sequence of both public and hidden imams, including the Fatimid imam-caliphs, to the present day.[23]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Gibb 1995, p. 83.
  2. ^ a b Walker 1995, p. 250.
  3. ^ Walker 1995, p. 249.
  4. ^ Brett 2017, pp. 201–205.
  5. ^ Walker 1995, pp. 250–251.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Walker 1995, p. 251.
  7. ^ a b Stern 1950, p. 24.
  8. ^ Brett 2017, pp. 205–206.
  9. ^ a b c d Gibb 1993, p. 725.
  10. ^ Walker 1995, pp. 240–242.
  11. ^ a b c Daftary 2007, p. 241.
  12. ^ Brett 2017, p. 228.
  13. ^ a b c d Halm 2014, p. 90.
  14. ^ Halm 2014, pp. 86–87.
  15. ^ a b c Walker 1995, p. 254.
  16. ^ Halm 2014, p. 89.
  17. ^ Madelung 1971, p. 1163.
  18. ^ Daftary 2007, pp. 36–38.
  19. ^ Madelung 1971, pp. 1163–1164.
  20. ^ Daftary 2007, pp. 1, 39–86.
  21. ^ Madelung 1971, pp. 1166–1167.
  22. ^ Daftary 2007, pp. 38, 88–89.
  23. ^ Daftary 2007, pp. 89–98, 99–100, 507ff..
  24. ^ Walker 1995, p. 252.
  25. ^ Brett 2017, pp. 228–229.
  26. ^ Stern 1950, pp. 25–29.
  27. ^ Walker 1995, pp. 252, 257.
  28. ^ a b Halm 2014, p. 88.
  29. ^ a b Walker 1995, p. 253.
  30. ^ Walker 1995, pp. 253–254.
  31. ^ a b c Daftary 2007, p. 242.
  32. ^ a b c d Walker 1995, p. 255.
  33. ^ a b c d e Walker 2022.
  34. ^ Halm 2014, p. 91.
  35. ^ a b Walker 1995, p. 248.
  36. ^ a b Stern 1951, p. 194.
  37. ^ Daftary 2007, pp. 242–243.
  38. ^ Daftary 2007, pp. 242–243, 324–325.
  39. ^ Brett 2017, pp. 229–230.
  40. ^ Stern 1950, p. 20.
  41. ^ Brett 2017, p. 252.
  42. ^ a b Daftary 2007, p. 244.
  43. ^ Brett 2017, pp. 233–234, 261.
  44. ^ Daftary 2007, p. 246.
  45. ^ Daftary 2007, pp. 247–248.
  46. ^ Brett 2017, pp. 263–265.
  47. ^ Halm 2014, pp. 178–183.
  48. ^ Brett 2017, pp. 265–266.
  49. ^ Daftary 2007, pp. 248, 264.
  50. ^ Daftary 2007, p. 248.
  51. ^ Daftary 2007, p. 325.
  52. ^ Walker 1995, pp. 255–256.
  53. ^ Halm 2014, pp. 186–187.
  54. ^ a b Walker 1995, p. 256.
  55. ^ Halm 2014, pp. 221–222.
  56. ^ Halm 2014, p. 249.
  57. ^ a b Daftary 2007, p. 326.
  58. ^ Daftary 2007, pp. 301–302, 326, 509.
  59. ^ Daftary 2007, pp. 301–302, 326.
  60. ^ Halm 2014, pp. 157, 158.
  61. ^ Daftary 2007, pp. 301–302, 326, 363–364.
  62. ^ Halm 2014, pp. 259–261, 336.
  63. ^ Daftary 2007, p. 509.
  64. ^ a b c Halm 2014, p. 261.
  65. ^ Daftary 2007, p. 630 (note 138).
  66. ^ Andani 2016, pp. 273–274.
  67. ^ Halm 2014, pp. 91, 261.

Sources edit

External links edit

  • Ismaili History: AL-NIZAR (487-490/1095-1097), The Heritage Society.
Nizar ibn al-Mustansir
Born: 1045 Died: 1095
Regnal titles
Preceded by Fatimid Caliph
(claimant in Alexandria)

1095
Succeeded by
Shia Islam titles
Preceded by 19th Imam of Nizari Isma'ilism
1094–1095
Succeeded by

nizar, mustansir, mansur, arabic, أبو, منصور, نزار, بن, المستنصر, romanized, abū, manṣūr, nizār, mustanṣir, 1045, 1095, fatimid, prince, oldest, eighth, fatimid, caliph, eighteenth, isma, imam, mustansir, when, father, died, december, 1094, powerful, vizier, a. Abu Mansur Nizar ibn al Mustansir Arabic أبو منصور نزار بن المستنصر romanized Abu Manṣur Nizar ibn al Mustanṣir 1045 1095 was a Fatimid prince and the oldest son of the eighth Fatimid caliph and eighteenth Isma ili imam al Mustansir When his father died in December 1094 the powerful vizier al Afdal Shahanshah raised Nizar s younger brother al Musta li to the throne in Cairo bypassing the claims of Nizar and other older sons of al Mustansir Nizar escaped Cairo rebelled and seized Alexandria where he reigned as caliph with the regnal name al Mustafa li Din Allah Arabic المصطفى لدين الله romanized al Muṣṭafa li Din Allah In late 1095 he was defeated and taken prisoner to Cairo where he was executed by immurement Nizar ibn al MustansirGold dinar minted in the name of Nizar at Alexandria in 1095Born26 September 1045Cairo EgyptDiedc November December 1095 aged 50 Cairo EgyptCause of deathImmurementTitleImam of Nizari Isma ilismTerm1094 1095Predecessoral Mustansir BillahSuccessorAli al Hadi in concealment Parental Mustansir Billah father FamilyFatimid dynasty During the 12th century some of Nizar s actual or claimed descendants tried without success to seize the throne from the Fatimid caliphs Many Isma ilis especially in Persia rejected al Musta li s imamate and considered Nizar as the rightful imam As a result they split off from the Fatimid regime and founded the Nizari branch of Isma ilism with their own line of imams who claimed descent from Nizar This line continues to this day in the person of the Aga Khan Contents 1 Life 1 1 Disputed succession 1 2 Rebellion and death 2 Nizari schism 3 Descendants and succession 4 Footnotes 5 References 6 Sources 7 External linksLife editNizar was born on 26 September 1045 5 Rabiʿ al ʾAwwal 437 A H to the ruling Fatimid imam caliph al Mustansir r 1036 1094 1 At that time al Mustansir was around 15 years old and had already been on the throne for ten years 2 Nizar was most likely the eldest son of the caliph although another son named Abu Abdallah is sometimes listed as the senior of al Mustansir s sons a 2 In the late 1060s the Fatimid Caliphate entered a profound crisis with the advance of the Seljuk Turks from the east threatening its hold over Syria and protracted clashes between the Fatimid army s Turkish and black African troops in Egypt leading to the breakdown of the central government and widespread famine and anarchy 4 In about 1068 as internal turmoil threatened the dynasty with collapse al Mustansir dispersed his sons throughout his territories as a safeguard keeping only an unnamed underage son close to him The account by the Mamluk era historian al Maqrizi says that Abu Abdallah and Abu Ali were to go to Acre to join the army of the commander Badr al Jamali Abu l Qasim Muhammad father of the Caliph al Hafiz to Ascalon while another unnamed but underage son remained in Cairo 5 Nizar is not mentioned by al Maqrizi but he was very likely included in this measure 6 and the al Hidaya al Amiriyya a proclamation issued in 1122 by Caliph al Amir r 1101 1130 claims that he was sent to the port of Damietta 7 This dispersal of the Fatimid princes lasted at least until Badr al Jamali assumed power in 1073 as vizier and quasi dictator and restored order in Egypt 6 8 Disputed succession edit As the oldest son Nizar was apparently considered to be his father s most likely successor as was the custom 9 indeed historians often state that Nizar had been his father s designated b successor 11 12 However no formal designation of Nizar as heir seems to have taken place by the time of al Mustansir s death in December 1094 9 13 Al Maqrizi writes that this was due to the machinations of Badr s son al Afdal Shahanshah who had succeeded his father to the vizierate in June 1094 14 According to al Maqrizi a deep seated enmity existed between al Afdal and Nizar An anecdote tells how al Afdal had once tried to enter the palace on horseback a privilege reserved for the caliph whereupon Nizar yelled at him to dismount and called him a dirty Armenian Since then the two had been bitter enemies with al Afdal obstructing Nizar s activities and demoting his servants while at the same time winning the army s commanders over to his cause Only one of them the Berber Muhammad ibn Masal al Lukki is said to have remained loyal to Nizar because he had promised to appoint him vizier instead of al Afdal 15 16 According to al Maqrizi al Afdal pressured al Mustansir to prevent Nizar s public nomination as heir 15 and when the caliph died al Afdal raised a much younger c half brother of Nizar al Musta li to the throne and the imamate d Al Musta li who had shortly before married al Afdal s sister was completely dependent on al Afdal for his accession This made him a compliant figurehead who was unlikely to threaten al Afdal s recent and therefore as yet fragile hold on power 11 24 25 In order to defend al Musta li s succession and counter the claims of Nizar s partisans al Mu stali s son and successor al Amir issued the al Hidaya al Amiriyya This document puts a different spin on the dispersal of the princes supposedly they were sent away in order of importance with those closest to Cairo and thus the caliph himself being the highest in rank 6 7 Modern historians point out that this was a deliberately misconstrued argument as the princes were sent away for their protection According to the historian Paul E Walker sending Abu Abdallah to the strong army of Badr al Jamali was if anything an indication of his high importance and of his father s desire to keep him safe 6 At the same time the unidentified underage son left in Cairo was clearly not al Musta li who had not even been born yet Walker identifies the unnamed prince with Abu l Qasim Ahmad whose birth had been publicly announced in 1060 That prince had likely died in the meantime as the future al Musta li born in 1074 was given the same name 6 The al Hidaya al Amiriyya and other accounts further assert the legitimacy of al Musta li s accession by reporting stories that on the wedding banquet of al Musta li or on his deathbed al Mustansir had chosen him as his heir and that one of al Mustansir s sisters is said to have been called to him privately and received al Musta li s nomination as a bequest 9 26 27 Modern historians such as Farhad Daftary believe these stories to be most likely attempts to justify and retroactively legitimize what was in effect a coup d etat by al Afdal 11 However al Maqrizi also includes a different narrative that casts doubt on whether al Afdal s move was really a carefully prepared coup When al Afdal summoned three of al Mustansir s sons Nizar Abdallah and Isma il apparently the most prominent among the caliph s progeny to the palace to do homage to al Musta li who had been seated on the throne they each refused Not only did they reject al Musta li but each of them claimed that al Mustansir had chosen him as his successor Nizar claimed that he had a written document to this effect 28 29 This refusal apparently took al Afdal completely by surprise The brothers were allowed to leave the palace but while Abdallah and Isma il made for a nearby mosque Nizar immediately fled Cairo 28 29 To add to the confusion having learned of al Mustansir s passing Baraqat the chief missionary da i of Cairo the head of the Isma ili religious establishment proclaimed Abdallah as caliph with the regnal name al Muwaffaq 30 However al Afdal soon regained control Baraqat was arrested and later executed Abdallah and Isma il were placed under surveillance and eventually publicly acknowledged al Musta li A grand assembly of officials was held which acclaimed al Musta li as imam and caliph 15 Rebellion and death edit In the meantime Nizar fled to Alexandria with a few followers The local governor a Turk named Nasr al Dawla Aftakin opposed al Afdal so Nizar was quickly able to gain his support He also won over the local judge qadi the inhabitants and the surrounding Arab tribes to his cause He then rose in revolt and proclaimed himself imam and caliph with the title of al Mustafa li Din Allah the Chosen One for God s Religion 1 13 31 32 A gold dinar of Nizar bearing this title was discovered in 1994 attesting to his assumption of the caliphal title and the minting of coinage with it 31 According to Walker the speed with which Nizar gained support and some other stories narrated in al Maqrizi suggest the existence of a relatively large faction that expected or wanted him to succeed al Mustansir 32 Nizar s revolt was initially successful al Afdal s attack on Alexandria in February 1095 was easily repulsed and Nizar s forces raided up to the outskirts of Cairo Over the next months however al Afdal managed to win back the allegiance of the Arab tribes with bribes and gifts Weakened Nizar s forces were pushed back to Alexandria which was placed under siege In November Nizar s military commander Ibn Masal abandoned the city taking most of the remaining treasure with him This forced Aftakin and Nizar to surrender against a guarantee of their safety aman Both were taken back to Cairo where Nizar was immured and Aftakin was executed 1 13 31 32 The details or exact date of Nizar s death are unknown 33 In a surviving letter sent to the Isma ili Yemeni queen Arwa al Sulayhi announcing his accession al Musta li gives the official version of events as follows Like the other sons of al Mustansir Nizar had at first accepted his imamate and paid him homage before being moved by greed and envy to revolt The events up to the capitulation of Alexandria are reported in some detail but nothing is mentioned of Nizar s fate or that of Aftakin 34 Nizari schism editProblems with succession arrangements had emerged before but al Musta li s accession was the first time that rival members of the Fatimid dynasty had actually fought over the throne 35 Given the pivotal role of the imam in the Isma ili faith this was of momentous importance the issue of succession was not merely a matter of political intrigue but also intensely religious In the words of the modern pioneer of Isma ili studies Samuel Miklos Stern on it depended the continuity of institutional religion as well as the personal salvation of the believer 36 To the Isma ili faithful writes Stern it was not so much the person of the claimant that weighed with his followers they were not moved by any superior merits of Nizar as a ruler it was the divine right personified in the legitimate heir that counted 36 As a result the events of 1094 1095 caused a bitter and permanent schism in the Isma ili movement that continues to the present 35 37 While al Musta li was recognized by the Fatimid elites and the official Isma ili religious establishment the da wa as well as the Isma ili communities dependent on it in Syria and Yemen most of the Isma ili communities in the wider Middle East and especially Persia and Iraq rejected it Whether out of genuine conviction or as a convenient excuse to rid himself of Cairo s control the chief Isma ili da i in Persia Hassan i Sabbah swiftly recognized Nizar s rights to the imamate possibly already during Nizar s rule in Alexandria severed relations with Cairo and set up his own independent hierarchy the da wa jadida lit new calling This marked the permanent and enduring split of the Isma ili movement into rival Musta li and Nizari branches 33 38 39 Over the following decades the Nizaris were among the most bitter enemies of the Musta li rulers of Egypt 40 Hassan i Sabbah founded the Order of Assassins which was responsible for the assassination of al Afdal in 1121 41 42 and of al Musta li s son and successor al Amir who was also al Afdal s nephew and son in law in October 1130 42 43 This led to a succession of coups and crises that heralded the decline of the Fatimid state and its eventual collapse 44 In 1130 1131 the Fatimid regime was temporarily abolished by al Afdal s son Kutayfat before Nizar s nephew Abd al Majid in the absence of a direct heir of al Amir assumed the imamate and the caliphate as the caliph al Hafiz in January 1132 45 46 47 Al Hafiz succession led to another schism in Isma ilism between those Musta lis who accepted al Hafiz succession the Hafizis and those who did not upholding instead the imamate of al Amir s infant son al Tayyib the Tayyibis 48 49 Whereas Nizari Isma ilism survived in Persia and Syria and Tayyibi Isma ilism in Yemen and India the Hafizi sect closely associated with the Fatimid state did not long survive the latter s final abolition by Saladin in 1171 50 vteThe Musta li Nizari and Hafizi Tayyibi schisms in the lines of succession of the Isma ili imamate al Mustansir bi llah r 1036 1094 Abu l Qasim Muhammadal Musta li bi llah r 1094 1101 Abu Mansur Nizar al Hafiz li Din Allah r 1132 1149 al Amir bi Ahkam Allah r 1101 1130 al Tayyib Hafizi imam caliphsTayyibi hidden imamsNizari imams denotes ruling Fatimid caliphs with regnal dates Source Daftary Farhad 2007 The Ismaʿi li s Their History and Doctrines Second ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 508 ISBN 978 0 521 61636 2 Descendants and succession editFurther information History of Nizari Isma ilism Contemporary sources attest that Nizar had a number of sons 51 At least one of them al Husayn fled with other members of the dynasty including three of Nizar s brothers Muhammad Isma il and Tahir from Egypt to the western Maghreb in 1095 where they formed a sort of opposition in exile to the new regime in Cairo 13 32 There are indications that another of Nizar s sons named al Mukhtar Muhammad left for Yemen as coins in his name were minted there 33 In 1132 following the highly irregular accession of al Hafiz al Husayn tried to return to Egypt He managed to raise an army but al Hafiz successfully suborned his commanders and had him killed 52 53 In 1149 al Hafiz had to confront a similar threat by a purported son of Nizar The pretender managed to recruit a large following among the Berbers but he was also killed when the Fatimid caliph bribed his commanders 54 55 The last revolt by a Nizari claimant was by al Husayn s son Muhammad in 1162 but he was lured with false promises and executed by the vizier Ruzzik ibn Tala i 54 56 None of his sons had been formally designated as successor by Nizar however so they lacked the legitimacy to become imams after him This raised an acute problem for the Nizari faithful as Isma ili doctrine held that a line of divinely ordained imams could not possibly be broken 57 At first some Nizaris held that Nizar was not dead but would return as the Islamic messiah the Mahdi or at least in his company 1 In the absence of an imam coinage from Alamut Castle the centre of Hassan i Sabah s nascent Nizari Isma ili state in central Persia was minted with Nizar s regnal name of al Mustafa li Din Allah until 1162 33 57 No imam was named publicly at Alamut until then and Hassan i Sabbah and his two immediate successors ruled instead as da i s or as hujja s seals proofs representatives acting on behalf of the absent imam 58 However the Nizaris soon came to believe that a grandson or son of Nizar had been smuggled out of Egypt and brought to Alamut and was the rightful imam living in concealment satr 59 60 According to Nizari tradition the fourth ruler of Alamut Hassan II r 1162 1166 is considered to have been no longer a simple da i but secretly a descendant of Nizar and the rightful imam although this claim was not made explicit until the reign of his son Nur al Din Muhammad II 61 62 Modern Nizari tradition holds that three imams Ali al Hadi Muhammad I al Muhtadi and Hassan I al Qahir 63 64 ruled after Nizar while in concealment but various primary sources give different genealogies 65 64 According to the German scholar of Shi ism Heinz Halm the identities of the three concealed imams are most likely fictional 64 and the veracity of Hasan II s claims to Fatimid descent remain a major historiographical issue 66 Nevertheless Hassan II s successors have sustained their claim of descent from Nizar down to current imam of Nizari Isma ilism the Aga Khan 33 67 Footnotes edit The long reign of al Mustansir ensured that he had numerous offspring but no complete list exists and many of his sons shared parts of their names making their identification difficult Historian Paul E Walker estimated that al Mustansir had at the minimum seventeen sons whose names we can recover 3 The concept of designation nass is central to the early Shi a and particularly the Isma ili concept of the imamate but it also presented complications as the imam possessed God s infallibility isma he could not possibly err especially in the selection of his heir Appointed heirs predeceasing their fathers were a source of considerable embarrassment and therefore while an heir might be clearly favoured during his father s reign nass was often withheld until shortly before the ruling imam s death proclaimed in the latter s testament or left as a bequest with a third party 10 Al Musta li was apparently the youngest of all of al Mustansir s sons 9 6 An imam is a spiritual leader of the Islamic community of the faithful ummah as successor of Muhammad 17 After the civil wars of the early Muslim period the Sunni mainstream followed the caliphs as successors of Muhammad and attached few conditions to leadership positions 18 19 On the other hand the Shi a gradually developed the notion of the imam as a singular divinely invested and guided successor of Muhammad a figure endowed with unique qualities and the living proof hujja of God The position was reserved for a member of the family of Muhammad with Muhammad s son in law Ali ibn Abi Talib considered as the first such imam 20 21 The Twelver Shi a and Isma ili or Sevener branches split after the death of Ja far al Sadiq in 765 The Twelvers followed Musa al Kadhim as their seventh imam and end the line of their imams with al Mahdi the twelfth and final imam who went into occultation in 874 and whose messianic return is still awaited 22 The various Isma ili branches follow the line of succession from Isma il ibn Jafar through a continuous sequence of both public and hidden imams including the Fatimid imam caliphs to the present day 23 References edit a b c d Gibb 1995 p 83 a b Walker 1995 p 250 Walker 1995 p 249 Brett 2017 pp 201 205 Walker 1995 pp 250 251 a b c d e f Walker 1995 p 251 a b Stern 1950 p 24 Brett 2017 pp 205 206 a b c d Gibb 1993 p 725 Walker 1995 pp 240 242 a b c Daftary 2007 p 241 Brett 2017 p 228 a b c d Halm 2014 p 90 Halm 2014 pp 86 87 a b c Walker 1995 p 254 Halm 2014 p 89 Madelung 1971 p 1163 Daftary 2007 pp 36 38 Madelung 1971 pp 1163 1164 Daftary 2007 pp 1 39 86 Madelung 1971 pp 1166 1167 Daftary 2007 pp 38 88 89 Daftary 2007 pp 89 98 99 100 507ff Walker 1995 p 252 Brett 2017 pp 228 229 Stern 1950 pp 25 29 Walker 1995 pp 252 257 a b Halm 2014 p 88 a b Walker 1995 p 253 Walker 1995 pp 253 254 a b c Daftary 2007 p 242 a b c d Walker 1995 p 255 a b c d e Walker 2022 Halm 2014 p 91 a b Walker 1995 p 248 a b Stern 1951 p 194 Daftary 2007 pp 242 243 Daftary 2007 pp 242 243 324 325 Brett 2017 pp 229 230 Stern 1950 p 20 Brett 2017 p 252 a b Daftary 2007 p 244 Brett 2017 pp 233 234 261 Daftary 2007 p 246 Daftary 2007 pp 247 248 Brett 2017 pp 263 265 Halm 2014 pp 178 183 Brett 2017 pp 265 266 Daftary 2007 pp 248 264 Daftary 2007 p 248 Daftary 2007 p 325 Walker 1995 pp 255 256 Halm 2014 pp 186 187 a b Walker 1995 p 256 Halm 2014 pp 221 222 Halm 2014 p 249 a b Daftary 2007 p 326 Daftary 2007 pp 301 302 326 509 Daftary 2007 pp 301 302 326 Halm 2014 pp 157 158 Daftary 2007 pp 301 302 326 363 364 Halm 2014 pp 259 261 336 Daftary 2007 p 509 a b c Halm 2014 p 261 Daftary 2007 p 630 note 138 Andani 2016 pp 273 274 Halm 2014 pp 91 261 Sources editAndani Khalil 2016 A Survey of Ismaili Studies Part 2 Post Fatimid and Modern Ismailism Religion Compass 10 11 269 282 doi 10 1111 rec3 12222 Brett Michael 2017 The Fatimid Empire The Edinburgh History of the Islamic Empires Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 4076 8 Daftary Farhad 2007 The Ismaʿi li s Their History and Doctrines Second ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 61636 2 Gibb H A R 1993 al Mustaʿli bi llah In Bosworth C E van Donzel E Heinrichs W P amp Pellat Ch eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Volume VII Mif Naz Leiden E J Brill p 725 ISBN 978 90 04 09419 2 Gibb H A R 1995 Nizar b al Mustanṣir In Bosworth C E van Donzel E Heinrichs W P amp Lecomte G eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Volume VIII Ned Sam Leiden E J Brill p 83 ISBN 978 90 04 09834 3 Halm Heinz 2014 Kalifen und Assassinen Agypten und der vordere Orient zur Zeit der ersten Kreuzzuge 1074 1171 Caliphs and Assassins Egypt and the Near East at the Time of the First Crusades 1074 1171 in German Munich C H Beck ISBN 978 3 406 66163 1 Madelung W 1971 Imama 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 1163 1169 OCLC 495469525 Stern S M 1950 The Epistle of the Fatimid Caliph al Amir al Hidaya al Amiriyya Its Date and Its Purpose The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland 82 1 20 31 doi 10 1017 S0035869X00103284 JSTOR 25222370 Stern S M 1951 The Succession to the Fatimid Imam al Amir the Claims of the Later Fatimids to the Imamate and the Rise of Ṭayyibi Ismailism Oriens 4 2 193 255 doi 10 2307 1579511 JSTOR 1579511 Walker Paul E 1995 Succession to Rule in the Shiite Caliphate Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt 32 239 264 doi 10 2307 40000841 JSTOR 40000841 Walker Paul E 2022 Nizar b al Mustanṣir In Fleet Kate Kramer Gudrun Matringe Denis Nawas John Rowson Everett eds Encyclopaedia of Islam 3rd ed Brill Online ISSN 1873 9830 External links editIsmaili History AL NIZAR 487 490 1095 1097 The Heritage Society Nizar ibn al MustansirFatimid dynastyBorn 1045 Died 1095 Regnal titles Preceded byAl Mustansir Fatimid Caliph claimant in Alexandria 1095 Succeeded byAl Musta li Shia Islam titles Preceded byAl Mustansir 19th Imam of Nizari Isma ilism1094 1095 Succeeded byAli al Hadi ibn Nizar in concealment Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nizar ibn al Mustansir amp oldid 1216674145, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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