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Zanj Rebellion

The Zanj Rebellion (Arabic: ثورة الزنج Thawrat al-Zanj / Zinj) was a major revolt against the Abbasid Caliphate, which took place from 869 until 883. Begun near the city of Basra in present-day southern Iraq and led by one Ali ibn Muhammad, the insurrection involved enslaved Bantu peoples ("Zanj") who had originally been captured from the coast of Southeast Africa and transported to the Middle East, principally to drain the region's salt marshes.[3] It grew to involve slaves and freemen, including both Southeastern Africans and Arabs, from several regions of the Caliphate, and claimed tens of thousands of lives before it was finally defeated.[4]

Zanj Rebellion

Map of Iraq and al-Ahwaz at the time of the Zanj revolt.
Date869–883
Location
Result Abbasid victory
Belligerents
Abbasid Caliphate

Zanj rebels

  • Slaves

Allied Arabs

Commanders and leaders
Abu Ahmad al-Muwaffaq
Abu al-'Abbas ibn al-Muwaffaq
Musa ibn Bugha
Abu al-Saj
Masrur al-Balkhi
Ahmad ibn Laythawayh
Ibrahim ibn Muhammad
Ali ibn Muhammad
Yahya ibn Muhammad al-Bahrani
Ali ibn Aban al-Muhallabi
Sulayman ibn Jami'
Sulayman ibn Musa al-Sha'rani
Ankalay ibn Ali ibn Muhammad

Several Muslim historians, such as al-Tabari and al-Mas'udi, consider the Zanj revolt to be one of the "most vicious and brutal uprisings" of the many disturbances that plagued the Abbasid central government.[4] Modern scholars have characterized the conflict as being "one of the bloodiest and most destructive rebellions which the history of Western Asia records,"[5] while at the same time praising its coverage as being among the "most fully and extensively described campaign[s] in the whole of early Islamic historical writing."[6] The precise composition of the rebels remains a subject of debate, both as regards their identity and as to the proportion of slaves and free among them – available historical sources being open to various interpretations.

Background Edit

 
Marshland around Basra, southern Iraq.

The Zanj were Bantu-speaking people who had been forcibly taken from Southeast Africa and were enslaved primarily for agricultural labor as part of the plantation economy of the Sawad (southern Iraq). The demand for servile labor during this period was fueled by wealthy residents of the port city of Basra, who had acquired extensive marshlands in the surrounding region. These lands had been abandoned as a result of peasant migration and repeated flooding over time, but they could be converted back into cultivatable status through intensive labor.[7]

Local magnates were able to gain ownership of this land on the condition that they would make it arable. As a result, they acquired large numbers of Zanj and other slaves, who were placed into work camps and tasked with clearing away the nitrous topsoil as part of the reclamation process. Other Zanj were used to work in the salt flats of the Sawad, especially in the area around Basra.[7]

Both the working and living conditions of the Zanj were considered to be extremely miserable. The menial labor they were engaged in was difficult and the slaves appear to have been poorly treated by their masters.[8] Two previous attempts to rebel against these circumstances are known to have occurred in 689–90 and in 694. Both of these revolts had quickly failed and thereafter little is known about their history prior to 869.[9]

Beginning in 861, the Abbasid Caliphate was weakened by a period of severe disorder known as the Anarchy at Samarra, during which the central government in Abbasid Samarra was paralyzed by a struggle between the caliphs and the military establishment for control of the state, and numerous mutinies of unpaid troops caused by the government's insolvency. During this period, six Caliphs swiftly succeeded one another in a series of power struggles until they finally ended with al-Mu'tamid being Abbasid caliph with the support of Turkish troops. Throughout the 860s the various factions in the capital were distracted by this conflict, which resulted in the deaths of several caliphs, army commanders and bureaucrats, the outbreak of multiple troop riots, a damaging civil war in 865–866, a great rebellion of the Kharijites in 866, and the virtual bankruptcy of the government.[10]

The anarchy in Samarra allowed a number of provinces to fall into the hands of rebels, while provincial governors were free to act in an independent manner in the territories assigned to them. The effective loss of provinces, in turn, resulted in a decrease in taxation revenues received by the central government, further exacerbating the crisis in the capital and crippling the government's ability to effectively respond to challenges against its authority. This continuing instability greatly facilitated the initial success of the Zanj revolt, as the government proved incapable of committing sufficient troops and resources to subdue the rebels.[10]

Ali ibn Muhammad Edit

 
A modern map of the Mesopotamian Marshes.

The leader of the revolt was Ali ibn Muhammad, an individual of uncertain background. Little is known about his family or early life due to a scarcity of information and conflicting accounts. According to one version, his paternal grandfather was descended from the Abd al-Qays and his mother was a member of Banu Asad ibn Khuzaymah. Some later commentators have presumed him to have been of Persian rather than Arab background, but other historians consider this to be unlikely. Ali himself claimed to have been descended from Ali, the son-in-law of the prophet Muhammad and fourth Rashid Caliph, but this was largely rejected by Muslim historians of the era as false.[11]

Regardless of his origins, Ali appears to have spent at least a part of his youth living in the area of Rayy, and at an unspecified date he moved to the Abbasid capital of Samarra, where he mixed with some of the influential slaves of Caliph al-Muntasir (r. 861–862). In 863, he made his way from Samarra to Bahrayn (eastern Arabia), where he pretended to be Shi'i and started to rouse the people into rebellion against the caliphate. Support for his cause quickly grew. A large number of Bahranis submitted to his authority and the kharaj (land taxes) were collected in his name. Despite this, his rebellion eventually failed due to opposition from the local inhabitants, whereupon Ali abandoned the region and relocated to the city of Basra in the Sawad in 868.[12]

In Basra, Ali sought to take advantage of disturbances caused by the city's rival groups, the Bilaliyyah and Sa'diyyah, and attempted to secure the support of one of the factions. Eventually he proclaimed a new revolt, but no one in the city rallied to his side and he was forced to flee to the Mesopotamian Marshes. There he was arrested by the provincial authorities and sent to Wasit. He was quickly able to secure his freedom and went to Baghdad, where he remained for the next year. During his time in Baghdad he claimed to be a Zaydi by being related to the grandson of Zayd ibn Ali and won over additional followers for his movement.[13]

When Ali heard news about another scuffle between Basra's factions in 869, he returned to the region and "began to seek out black slaves working in the Basra marshes and to inquire into their working conditions and nutritional standards."[14] He began a campaign to liberate and recruit Zanj and other slaves, promising them wealth, affluence and prosperity in exchange for their support. A trifling number of people quickly joined his cause, and Ali soon came to be known by the title Sāhib az-Zanj, meaning "Chief of the Zanj". However, Ali's movement attracted not only Zanj but many other people of different social groups. These included "semi-liberated slaves, clients of prestigious families, a number of small craftsmen and humble workers, some peasantry and some Bedouin peoples who lived around Basrah."[15]

While he was gaining followers for his rebellion, Ali adopted slogans of the egalitarian doctrine of the Kharijites, who "preached that the most qualified man should reign, even if he was an Abyssinian slave."[15] He inscribed his banner and coins with Kharijite expressions[16] and started off his Friday sermons with the slogan, "God is great, God is great, there is no God but God, and God is great; there is no arbitration except by God" (lā ḥakama illāllāh, walā ḥukma illā lillāh), which was "the war cry used by the Kharijites when they defected from the ranks of Ali during the Battle of Siffin".[15] At the same time, however, Ali did not completely abandon the pretense of being an Alid and maintained the claim that he was a Zaydi.[17]

Revolt Edit

 
The dry bed of the Nahrawan Canal in central Iraq. Riverine warfare on the regional waterways was a major aspect of the revolt[18]

The revolt, which began in September 869, was concentrated in the districts of Iraq and al-Ahwaz (modern Khuzestan Province) in the central regions of the Abbasid Caliphate.[19] Over the course of the next fourteen years, the Zanj were able to combat the superior arms of the Abbasid government by waging guerrilla warfare against their opponents. They became adept at raiding towns, villages and enemy camps (often at night), seizing weapons, horses, food and captives and freeing fellow slaves, and burning the rest to cinders to delay retaliation.[20] As the rebellion grew in strength, they also constructed fortresses, built up a navy for traversing the canals and rivers of the region, collected taxes in territories under their control, and minted their own coins.[21]

In its initial stages, the rebellion was limited to the region around the city of Basra and the Blind Tigris. Early efforts by the Abbasid government to crush the revolt proved ineffectual, and several towns and villages were occupied or sacked, including al-Ubulla in 870 and Suq al-Ahwaz in 871. Basra fell in September 871 following an extended blockade, resulting in the city being burned and its inhabitants massacred. A retaliatory campaign undertaken by the caliphal regent Abu Ahmad ibn al-Mutawakkil (known by his honorific of al-Muwaffaq) against the rebels in 872 ended in failure, and the Zanj remained on the offensive over the next several years.[22]

The continuing inability of the Abbasid army to suppress the revolt, caused in part by its preoccupation with fighting against the Saffarid Ya'qub ibn al-Layth's advance into al-Ahwaz and Iraq, eventually encouraged the Zanj to expand their activities to the north. A campaign by the rebels to occupy the marshlands between Basra and Wasit in 876 proved successful, and soon they made their way into the district of Kaskar. By 879, the rebellion reached its furthest extent. Wasit and Ramhurmuz were sacked and the rebels advanced northwest along the Tigris, coming to within fifty miles of Baghdad.[23]

The Abbasid government regained the initiative in the war in late 879, when al-Muwaffaq sent his son Abu al-'Abbas (the future caliph al-Mu'tadid) with a major force against the rebels. Al-Muwaffaq himself joined the offensive in the following year, and over the next several months the government forces succeeded in clearing the rebels out of the districts of Iraq and al-Ahwaz and driving them back toward their "capital" of al-Mukhtarah, to the south of Basra.[24]

Al-Mukhtarah was placed under siege in February 881, and over the next two and half years a policy by al-Muwaffaq of offering generous terms to anyone that voluntarily submitted convinced many of the rebels to abandon the struggle. The fall of al-Mukhtarah in August 883, combined with the death or capture of Ali ibn Muhammad and most of the rebel commanders, brought the revolt to an end, and the remaining rebels either surrendered to the government or were killed.[24]

Consequences Edit

The number of people killed in the conflict is difficult to estimate; contemporary writers gave widely variable figures, and these are considered by modern historians to be gross exaggerations.[25] Al-Mas'udi reported a "moderate" estimate of 500,000 casualties – though he added a clarification that this was "empty conjecture - rigorous calculation [of the number slain] is impossible" – and separately noted that 300,000 were killed at the Battle of Basra.[26] Al-Suli gave a figure of 1,500,000 dead, which was subsequently quoted by multiple sources, while Ibn al-Taqtaqi provided a high-end number of 2,500,000.[27] Al-Tabari's History contains no comprehensive figures, but the author frequently noted the number of soldiers killed or injured in individual battles, with amounts ranging from hundreds to thousands.[28]

"A large number of [people] hid among the houses and in the wells. They appeared only at night and hunted dogs, rats and cats...[t]hen they ate the corpses of their companions who had died, and they watched each other, waiting for someone to die. The stronger killed their comrades and devoured them..."

Passage describing conditions in Basra during the war.[29]

The rebellion greatly disrupted economic activity and caused extensive damage to the districts it took place in. Sources of the revolt describe burnt cities and towns, the seizure of food and other resources by advancing armies, the abandonment of lands and the cessation of agricultural activity, disruptions in the regional trade, and the damaging of bridges and canals in the name of military exigency.[30] Shortages of basic necessities, such as food and water, at times became severe, and instances of cannibalism are reported to have occurred.[31]

Both the rebels and their opponents engaged in looting, destroying supplies that were likely to fall into enemy hands, and massacring or executing captives.[32] The long term effects of the revolt, on the other hand, are more difficult to ascertain and opinions by modern historians vary; some like Bernard Lewis believe that the rebellion resulted in no significant changes, while others such as Theodor Nöldeke argue that the regions devastated by the conflict never fully recovered afterward.[33]

The significant arms and resources that the Abbasid government was required to throw against the Zanj meant that it was forced to divert its attention from other fronts for the duration of the conflict, resulting in the effective loss of several provinces. Ahmad ibn Tulun, the Tulunid governor of Egypt, was able to take advantage of the Abbasids' preoccupation with the Zanj and forge a de facto independent state which would survive for more than three decades, while the Saffarids Ya'qub ibn al-Layth and Amr ibn al-Layth seized several of the eastern provinces and faced no serious opposition from the central government until Ya'qub's attempt to march on Iraq itself in 876. The revolt may have also affected the government's ability to defend against the Byzantines, who scored several successes on the Anatolian frontier during this period, and possibly even indirectly contributed to the rise of the Qarmatians of Bahrain a few years later.[34]

Historiography Edit

 
The interior of a mudhif, a traditional Marsh Arab guesthouse made entirely out of reeds.

Ghada Hashem Talhami, a scholar of the Zanj rebellion, argues that modern views of the revolt are distorted by mistakenly equating the Zanj with East Africans. The assumption that Abbasid writers exclusively used the term "Zanj" to mean specifically the East African coast, and that therefore the people they called Zanj originated from a specific part of that region, is unsupported by contemporary sources due to their silence on the existence of an East African slave trade in this period, as well as by their occasional use of the term to mean "blacks" or "Africa" in general.

Talhami cites from various historians and works to make her point that the rebellion was more of a religious/social uprising made by the lowly classed and suppressed citizens of the Basra area, which included a wide variety of people, including slaves of indeterminate origin. She points out that the sources specifically state that the people referred to as "Zanj" were not the only participants of the revolt, but were joined by Bahranis, Bedouins and others from the Basra region; moreover, they give no explicit indication that the Zanj even constituted a majority of the rebels.[35]

Historian M. A. Shaban has argued that the rebellion was not a slave revolt, but a revolt of blacks (zanj). In his opinion, although a few runaway slaves did join the revolt, the majority of the participants were Arabs and free East Africans, and if the revolt had been led by slaves, they would have lacked the necessary resources to combat the Abbasid government for as long as they did.[36]

Sources of information Edit

Much of the current knowledge of the Zanj Rebellion comes from the historian al-Tabari's work History of the Prophets and Kings.[37] It has been the subject of research by such famous Orientalists as Theodor Nöldeke (Sketches from Eastern History) and Louis Massignon (The Passion of al-Hallaj). Alexandre Popović has authored a more recent monograph on the subject.

See also Edit

References Edit

Citations Edit

  1. ^ a b Kennedy 2004, pg. 178
  2. ^ Caskel 1960, p. 921.
  3. ^ Rodriguez 2007, p. 585.
  4. ^ a b Furlonge 1999, p. 7.
  5. ^ Nöldeke 1892, p. 174.
  6. ^ Kennedy 2001, p. 153.
  7. ^ a b Waines 1992, pp. 29–30, 35; Popovic 1999, pp. 12–25; McKinney 2004, pp. 464–65; Lewis 2002, pp. 112–13; Nöldeke 1892, pp. 148–49
  8. ^ Popovic 1999, pp. 12–13, 23–25; McKinney 2004, p. 465; Lewis 2002, pp. 112–13; Nöldeke 1892, pp. 148–49
  9. ^ Popovic 1999, pp. 22–23.
  10. ^ a b Kennedy 2004, pp. 169 ff., 177–78; Popovic 1999, pp. 25–29
  11. ^ Waines 1992, p. 30; Popovic 1999, pp. 33–35, 150, 155; Talhami 1977, p. 453; Lewis 2002, p. 113; Nöldeke 1892, pp. 146–47
  12. ^ Waines 1992, pp. 30–32; Popovic 1999, pp. 35–36; Talhami 1977, pp. 453–54
  13. ^ Waines 1992, pp. 32–33; Popovic 1999, pp. 38–39; Talhami 1977, p. 454
  14. ^ Talhami 1977, p. 454.
  15. ^ a b c Talhami 1977, p. 455
  16. ^ Waines 1992, p. 36; Walker 1933, pp. 651 ff
  17. ^ Waines 1992, pp. 33, 133–34.
  18. ^ Kennedy 2001, p. 154.
  19. ^ Popovic 1999, p. 10.
  20. ^ Waines 1992, pp. 36, 55, 59, 109, 110, 111, 121–22, 126, 132, 138, 140, 195, 198; Kennedy 2004, p. 178
  21. ^ Popovic 1999, pp. 81, 130–39; Walker 1933, pp. 651 ff
  22. ^ Waines 1992, pp. 38 ff., 108 ff., 120 ff., 136, 137 ff., 152 ff., 156, 158, 164 ff.; Popovic 1999, pp. 45–72; McKinney 2004, pp. 464–66; Nöldeke 1892, pp. 152–62
  23. ^ Waines 1992, pp. 174 ff., 181 ff., 186 ff., 190 ff., 200 ff., 204, 205 ff.; Fields 1987, pp. 2 ff., 6, 7 ff.; Popovic 1999, pp. 72–82; McKinney 2004, p. 466; Nöldeke 1892, pp. 162–64
  24. ^ a b Fields 1987, pp. 12 ff., 50 ff., 65 ff., 72 ff., 80, 82 ff., 91 ff., 98 ff., 128 ff.; Popovic 1999, pp. 91–122; McKinney 2004, p. 468; Nöldeke 1892, pp. 164–74
  25. ^ Popovic 1999, p. 154.
  26. ^ Al-Mas'udi 1861–1917, v. 8: pp. 58, 61.
  27. ^ McKinney 2004, pp. 468–69.
  28. ^ See for example Waines 1992, pp. 51, 55–56, 123, 147; Fields 1987, p. 92
  29. ^ Al-Mas'udi 1861–1917, v. 8: p. 59.
  30. ^ Waines 1992, pp. 110–11, 132, 152, 183, 204; Popovic 1999, pp. 153–54; McKinney 2004, p. 465; Nöldeke 1892, p. 158
  31. ^ McKinney 2004, p. 475, who notes a passage in al-Tabari detailing cannibal acts during the siege of al-Mukhtarah, but who expresses doubt on the veracity of the account; Al-Mas'udi 1861–1917, v. 8: p. 59
  32. ^ Al-Tabari's account contains numerous examples of these activities; see for example Waines 1992, pp. 39–40, 131–32, 140, 178, 198; Fields 1987, pp. 25, 26, 33, 36, 55, 121, 132
  33. ^ Popovic 1999, pp. 153–54, 156–57; Lewis 2002, p. 115; Nöldeke 1892, pp. 174–75
  34. ^ Popovic 1999, p. 153.
  35. ^ Talhami 1977, passim.
  36. ^ Shaban 1976, pp. 101–02.
  37. ^ Popovic 1999, p. 161, describes al-Tabari's account as being "by far the best source from every point of view".

Sources Edit

  • Al-Biruni, Abu al-Rayhan Muhammad ibn Ahmad (1879). C. Edward Sachau (ed.). Al-Athar al-Baqiyah 'an al-Qurun al-Khaliyah [The Chronology of Ancient Nations: An English Version of the Arabic Text of the Athar-ul-Bakiya of Al-Biruni, or "Vestiges of the Past," Collected and Reduced to Writing by the author in A.H. 390-1, A.D. 1000]. Translated by C. Edward Sachau. London: W.H. Allen & Co. p. 330.
  • Al-Duri, Abd al-Aziz (2007). Dirasat fi al-'Usur al-'Abbasiyya al-Muta'akhira (Studies in Late Abbasid Times). Beirut: Markaz Dirasat al-Wahdah al-ʻArabiyah. ISBN 978-9953-82-104-7.
  • Fields, Philip M., ed. (1987). The History of al-Ṭabarī, Volume XXXVII: The ʿAbbāsid Recovery. The War Against the Zanj Ends, A.D. 879–893/A.H. 266–279. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press. ISBN 0-88706-053-6.
  • Furlonge, Nigel D. (1999). "Revisiting the Zanj and Re-Visioning Revolt: Complexities of the Zanj Conflict - 868-883 AD". Negro History Bulletin. 62 (4): 7–14. Retrieved 4 November 2015.(registration required)
  • Heers, Jacques (2003). Les Négriers en terres d'Islam: la première traite des noirs, VIIe-XVIe siècle. Paris: Perrin. ISBN 2-262-01850-2.
  • Ibn al-Athir, 'Izz al-Din (1987). Al-Kamil fi al-Tarikh, Vol. 6 (in Arabic). Beirut: Dar al-'Ilmiyyah.
  • Ibn al-Jawzi, Abu al-Faraj Abd al-Rahman ibn Ali (1992). 'Ata, Muhammad 'Abd al-Qadir; 'Ata, Mustafa 'Abd al-Qadir (eds.). Al-Muntazam fi Ta'rikh al-Muluk wa al-Umam (Classification in History of Kings and Nations), Vol. 12. Beirut: Dar al-Kutub al-'Ilmiyya.
  • Kennedy, Hugh N. (2001). The armies of the caliphs: military and society in the early Islamic state. London and New York: Routledge. pp. 153 ff. ISBN 0-415-25093-5.
  • Kennedy, Hugh (2004). The Prophet and the Age of the Caliphates: The Islamic Near East from the 6th to the 11th Century (Second ed.). Pearson Education Ltd. ISBN 0-582-40525-4.
  • Lewis, Bernard (2002). The Arabs in History. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 112 ff. ISBN 0-19-280310-7.
  • Al-Mas'udi, Ali ibn al-Husain (1861–1917). Les Prairies D'Or. Vol. 9 vols. Ed. and Trans. Charles Barbier de Meynard and Abel Pavet de Courteille. Paris: Imprimerie Nationale.
  • McKinney, Robert C. (2004). The Case of Rhyme versus Reason: Ibn al-Rumi and His Poetics in Context. Leiden and Boston: Brill. ISBN 90-04-13010-1.
  • Nöldeke, Theodor (1892). Sketches from Eastern History. Trans. Charles John Sutherland Black. London and Edinburgh: Adam and Charles Black.
  • Popovic, Alexandre (1999). The Revolt of African Slaves in Iraq, in the 3rd/9th Century. Trans. Léon King. Princeton: Markus Wiener Publishers. ISBN 1-55876-162-4.
  • Rodriguez, Junius P., ed. (2007). "Zanj Slave Revolts". Encyclopedia of Slave Resistance and Rebellion, Volume 2. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 585. ISBN 978-0-313-33273-9.
  • Al-Samir, Faisal (1954). Thawrat al-Zanj (The Zanj Rebellion). Baghdad: Dar al-Qari'.
  • Shaban, M.A. (1976). Islamic History: A New Interpretation, Vol 2: A.D. 750-1055 (A.H. 132-448). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 100 ff. ISBN 0-521-21198-0.
  • Talhami, Ghada Hashem (1977). "The Zanj Rebellion Reconsidered". The International Journal of African Historical Studies. 10 (3): 443–461. doi:10.2307/216737. JSTOR 216737.
  • Waines, David, ed. (1992). The History of al-Ṭabarī, Volume XXXVI: The Revolt of the Zanj, A.D. 869–879/A.H. 255–265. Albany, New York: State University of New York Press. ISBN 0-7914-0764-0.
  • Walker, John (July 1933). "A Rare Coin of the Zanj". The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland. 65 (3): 651–655. doi:10.1017/S1356186300500066. JSTOR 25194841. S2CID 250345335.

External links Edit

  • The Largest African Slave Revolt

zanj, rebellion, arabic, ثورة, الزنج, thawrat, zanj, zinj, major, revolt, against, abbasid, caliphate, which, took, place, from, until, begun, near, city, basra, present, southern, iraq, muhammad, insurrection, involved, enslaved, bantu, peoples, zanj, origina. The Zanj Rebellion Arabic ثورة الزنج Thawrat al Zanj Zinj was a major revolt against the Abbasid Caliphate which took place from 869 until 883 Begun near the city of Basra in present day southern Iraq and led by one Ali ibn Muhammad the insurrection involved enslaved Bantu peoples Zanj who had originally been captured from the coast of Southeast Africa and transported to the Middle East principally to drain the region s salt marshes 3 It grew to involve slaves and freemen including both Southeastern Africans and Arabs from several regions of the Caliphate and claimed tens of thousands of lives before it was finally defeated 4 Zanj RebellionMap of Iraq and al Ahwaz at the time of the Zanj revolt Date869 883LocationLower Mesopotamia and Al AhwazResultAbbasid victoryBelligerentsAbbasid CaliphateZanj rebels SlavesAllied Arabs Banu Tamim 1 Banu Asad ibn Khuzaymah 1 Bahila 2 Commanders and leadersAbu Ahmad al MuwaffaqAbu al Abbas ibn al MuwaffaqMusa ibn BughaAbu al SajMasrur al BalkhiAhmad ibn LaythawayhIbrahim ibn MuhammadAli ibn MuhammadYahya ibn Muhammad al BahraniAli ibn Aban al MuhallabiSulayman ibn Jami Sulayman ibn Musa al Sha raniAnkalay ibn Ali ibn Muhammad Several Muslim historians such as al Tabari and al Mas udi consider the Zanj revolt to be one of the most vicious and brutal uprisings of the many disturbances that plagued the Abbasid central government 4 Modern scholars have characterized the conflict as being one of the bloodiest and most destructive rebellions which the history of Western Asia records 5 while at the same time praising its coverage as being among the most fully and extensively described campaign s in the whole of early Islamic historical writing 6 The precise composition of the rebels remains a subject of debate both as regards their identity and as to the proportion of slaves and free among them available historical sources being open to various interpretations Contents 1 Background 2 Ali ibn Muhammad 3 Revolt 4 Consequences 5 Historiography 5 1 Sources of information 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 Sources 8 External linksBackground Edit nbsp Marshland around Basra southern Iraq The Zanj were Bantu speaking people who had been forcibly taken from Southeast Africa and were enslaved primarily for agricultural labor as part of the plantation economy of the Sawad southern Iraq The demand for servile labor during this period was fueled by wealthy residents of the port city of Basra who had acquired extensive marshlands in the surrounding region These lands had been abandoned as a result of peasant migration and repeated flooding over time but they could be converted back into cultivatable status through intensive labor 7 Local magnates were able to gain ownership of this land on the condition that they would make it arable As a result they acquired large numbers of Zanj and other slaves who were placed into work camps and tasked with clearing away the nitrous topsoil as part of the reclamation process Other Zanj were used to work in the salt flats of the Sawad especially in the area around Basra 7 Both the working and living conditions of the Zanj were considered to be extremely miserable The menial labor they were engaged in was difficult and the slaves appear to have been poorly treated by their masters 8 Two previous attempts to rebel against these circumstances are known to have occurred in 689 90 and in 694 Both of these revolts had quickly failed and thereafter little is known about their history prior to 869 9 Beginning in 861 the Abbasid Caliphate was weakened by a period of severe disorder known as the Anarchy at Samarra during which the central government in Abbasid Samarra was paralyzed by a struggle between the caliphs and the military establishment for control of the state and numerous mutinies of unpaid troops caused by the government s insolvency During this period six Caliphs swiftly succeeded one another in a series of power struggles until they finally ended with al Mu tamid being Abbasid caliph with the support of Turkish troops Throughout the 860s the various factions in the capital were distracted by this conflict which resulted in the deaths of several caliphs army commanders and bureaucrats the outbreak of multiple troop riots a damaging civil war in 865 866 a great rebellion of the Kharijites in 866 and the virtual bankruptcy of the government 10 The anarchy in Samarra allowed a number of provinces to fall into the hands of rebels while provincial governors were free to act in an independent manner in the territories assigned to them The effective loss of provinces in turn resulted in a decrease in taxation revenues received by the central government further exacerbating the crisis in the capital and crippling the government s ability to effectively respond to challenges against its authority This continuing instability greatly facilitated the initial success of the Zanj revolt as the government proved incapable of committing sufficient troops and resources to subdue the rebels 10 Ali ibn Muhammad Edit nbsp A modern map of the Mesopotamian Marshes The leader of the revolt was Ali ibn Muhammad an individual of uncertain background Little is known about his family or early life due to a scarcity of information and conflicting accounts According to one version his paternal grandfather was descended from the Abd al Qays and his mother was a member of Banu Asad ibn Khuzaymah Some later commentators have presumed him to have been of Persian rather than Arab background but other historians consider this to be unlikely Ali himself claimed to have been descended from Ali the son in law of the prophet Muhammad and fourth Rashid Caliph but this was largely rejected by Muslim historians of the era as false 11 Regardless of his origins Ali appears to have spent at least a part of his youth living in the area of Rayy and at an unspecified date he moved to the Abbasid capital of Samarra where he mixed with some of the influential slaves of Caliph al Muntasir r 861 862 In 863 he made his way from Samarra to Bahrayn eastern Arabia where he pretended to be Shi i and started to rouse the people into rebellion against the caliphate Support for his cause quickly grew A large number of Bahranis submitted to his authority and the kharaj land taxes were collected in his name Despite this his rebellion eventually failed due to opposition from the local inhabitants whereupon Ali abandoned the region and relocated to the city of Basra in the Sawad in 868 12 In Basra Ali sought to take advantage of disturbances caused by the city s rival groups the Bilaliyyah and Sa diyyah and attempted to secure the support of one of the factions Eventually he proclaimed a new revolt but no one in the city rallied to his side and he was forced to flee to the Mesopotamian Marshes There he was arrested by the provincial authorities and sent to Wasit He was quickly able to secure his freedom and went to Baghdad where he remained for the next year During his time in Baghdad he claimed to be a Zaydi by being related to the grandson of Zayd ibn Ali and won over additional followers for his movement 13 When Ali heard news about another scuffle between Basra s factions in 869 he returned to the region and began to seek out black slaves working in the Basra marshes and to inquire into their working conditions and nutritional standards 14 He began a campaign to liberate and recruit Zanj and other slaves promising them wealth affluence and prosperity in exchange for their support A trifling number of people quickly joined his cause and Ali soon came to be known by the title Sahib az Zanj meaning Chief of the Zanj However Ali s movement attracted not only Zanj but many other people of different social groups These included semi liberated slaves clients of prestigious families a number of small craftsmen and humble workers some peasantry and some Bedouin peoples who lived around Basrah 15 While he was gaining followers for his rebellion Ali adopted slogans of the egalitarian doctrine of the Kharijites who preached that the most qualified man should reign even if he was an Abyssinian slave 15 He inscribed his banner and coins with Kharijite expressions 16 and started off his Friday sermons with the slogan God is great God is great there is no God but God and God is great there is no arbitration except by God la ḥakama illallah wala ḥukma illa lillah which was the war cry used by the Kharijites when they defected from the ranks of Ali during the Battle of Siffin 15 At the same time however Ali did not completely abandon the pretense of being an Alid and maintained the claim that he was a Zaydi 17 Revolt EditMain articles Iraq theater Zanj Rebellion and Al Ahwaz theater Zanj Rebellion nbsp The dry bed of the Nahrawan Canal in central Iraq Riverine warfare on the regional waterways was a major aspect of the revolt 18 The revolt which began in September 869 was concentrated in the districts of Iraq and al Ahwaz modern Khuzestan Province in the central regions of the Abbasid Caliphate 19 Over the course of the next fourteen years the Zanj were able to combat the superior arms of the Abbasid government by waging guerrilla warfare against their opponents They became adept at raiding towns villages and enemy camps often at night seizing weapons horses food and captives and freeing fellow slaves and burning the rest to cinders to delay retaliation 20 As the rebellion grew in strength they also constructed fortresses built up a navy for traversing the canals and rivers of the region collected taxes in territories under their control and minted their own coins 21 In its initial stages the rebellion was limited to the region around the city of Basra and the Blind Tigris Early efforts by the Abbasid government to crush the revolt proved ineffectual and several towns and villages were occupied or sacked including al Ubulla in 870 and Suq al Ahwaz in 871 Basra fell in September 871 following an extended blockade resulting in the city being burned and its inhabitants massacred A retaliatory campaign undertaken by the caliphal regent Abu Ahmad ibn al Mutawakkil known by his honorific of al Muwaffaq against the rebels in 872 ended in failure and the Zanj remained on the offensive over the next several years 22 The continuing inability of the Abbasid army to suppress the revolt caused in part by its preoccupation with fighting against the Saffarid Ya qub ibn al Layth s advance into al Ahwaz and Iraq eventually encouraged the Zanj to expand their activities to the north A campaign by the rebels to occupy the marshlands between Basra and Wasit in 876 proved successful and soon they made their way into the district of Kaskar By 879 the rebellion reached its furthest extent Wasit and Ramhurmuz were sacked and the rebels advanced northwest along the Tigris coming to within fifty miles of Baghdad 23 The Abbasid government regained the initiative in the war in late 879 when al Muwaffaq sent his son Abu al Abbas the future caliph al Mu tadid with a major force against the rebels Al Muwaffaq himself joined the offensive in the following year and over the next several months the government forces succeeded in clearing the rebels out of the districts of Iraq and al Ahwaz and driving them back toward their capital of al Mukhtarah to the south of Basra 24 Al Mukhtarah was placed under siege in February 881 and over the next two and half years a policy by al Muwaffaq of offering generous terms to anyone that voluntarily submitted convinced many of the rebels to abandon the struggle The fall of al Mukhtarah in August 883 combined with the death or capture of Ali ibn Muhammad and most of the rebel commanders brought the revolt to an end and the remaining rebels either surrendered to the government or were killed 24 Consequences EditThe number of people killed in the conflict is difficult to estimate contemporary writers gave widely variable figures and these are considered by modern historians to be gross exaggerations 25 Al Mas udi reported a moderate estimate of 500 000 casualties though he added a clarification that this was empty conjecture rigorous calculation of the number slain is impossible and separately noted that 300 000 were killed at the Battle of Basra 26 Al Suli gave a figure of 1 500 000 dead which was subsequently quoted by multiple sources while Ibn al Taqtaqi provided a high end number of 2 500 000 27 Al Tabari s History contains no comprehensive figures but the author frequently noted the number of soldiers killed or injured in individual battles with amounts ranging from hundreds to thousands 28 A large number of people hid among the houses and in the wells They appeared only at night and hunted dogs rats and cats t hen they ate the corpses of their companions who had died and they watched each other waiting for someone to die The stronger killed their comrades and devoured them Passage describing conditions in Basra during the war 29 The rebellion greatly disrupted economic activity and caused extensive damage to the districts it took place in Sources of the revolt describe burnt cities and towns the seizure of food and other resources by advancing armies the abandonment of lands and the cessation of agricultural activity disruptions in the regional trade and the damaging of bridges and canals in the name of military exigency 30 Shortages of basic necessities such as food and water at times became severe and instances of cannibalism are reported to have occurred 31 Both the rebels and their opponents engaged in looting destroying supplies that were likely to fall into enemy hands and massacring or executing captives 32 The long term effects of the revolt on the other hand are more difficult to ascertain and opinions by modern historians vary some like Bernard Lewis believe that the rebellion resulted in no significant changes while others such as Theodor Noldeke argue that the regions devastated by the conflict never fully recovered afterward 33 The significant arms and resources that the Abbasid government was required to throw against the Zanj meant that it was forced to divert its attention from other fronts for the duration of the conflict resulting in the effective loss of several provinces Ahmad ibn Tulun the Tulunid governor of Egypt was able to take advantage of the Abbasids preoccupation with the Zanj and forge a de facto independent state which would survive for more than three decades while the Saffarids Ya qub ibn al Layth and Amr ibn al Layth seized several of the eastern provinces and faced no serious opposition from the central government until Ya qub s attempt to march on Iraq itself in 876 The revolt may have also affected the government s ability to defend against the Byzantines who scored several successes on the Anatolian frontier during this period and possibly even indirectly contributed to the rise of the Qarmatians of Bahrain a few years later 34 Historiography Edit nbsp The interior of a mudhif a traditional Marsh Arab guesthouse made entirely out of reeds Ghada Hashem Talhami a scholar of the Zanj rebellion argues that modern views of the revolt are distorted by mistakenly equating the Zanj with East Africans The assumption that Abbasid writers exclusively used the term Zanj to mean specifically the East African coast and that therefore the people they called Zanj originated from a specific part of that region is unsupported by contemporary sources due to their silence on the existence of an East African slave trade in this period as well as by their occasional use of the term to mean blacks or Africa in general Talhami cites from various historians and works to make her point that the rebellion was more of a religious social uprising made by the lowly classed and suppressed citizens of the Basra area which included a wide variety of people including slaves of indeterminate origin She points out that the sources specifically state that the people referred to as Zanj were not the only participants of the revolt but were joined by Bahranis Bedouins and others from the Basra region moreover they give no explicit indication that the Zanj even constituted a majority of the rebels 35 Historian M A Shaban has argued that the rebellion was not a slave revolt but a revolt of blacks zanj In his opinion although a few runaway slaves did join the revolt the majority of the participants were Arabs and free East Africans and if the revolt had been led by slaves they would have lacked the necessary resources to combat the Abbasid government for as long as they did 36 Sources of information Edit Much of the current knowledge of the Zanj Rebellion comes from the historian al Tabari s work History of the Prophets and Kings 37 It has been the subject of research by such famous Orientalists as Theodor Noldeke Sketches from Eastern History and Louis Massignon The Passion of al Hallaj Alexandre Popovic has authored a more recent monograph on the subject See also EditAl Mu tamid Abbasid caliph r 870 892 during Zanj Rebellion Afro Iraqi Battle of Basra 871 References EditCitations Edit a b Kennedy 2004 pg 178 Caskel 1960 p 921 Rodriguez 2007 p 585 a b Furlonge 1999 p 7 Noldeke 1892 p 174 Kennedy 2001 p 153 a b Waines 1992 pp 29 30 35 Popovic 1999 pp 12 25 McKinney 2004 pp 464 65 Lewis 2002 pp 112 13 Noldeke 1892 pp 148 49 Popovic 1999 pp 12 13 23 25 McKinney 2004 p 465 Lewis 2002 pp 112 13 Noldeke 1892 pp 148 49 Popovic 1999 pp 22 23 a b Kennedy 2004 pp 169 ff 177 78 Popovic 1999 pp 25 29 Waines 1992 p 30 Popovic 1999 pp 33 35 150 155 Talhami 1977 p 453 Lewis 2002 p 113 Noldeke 1892 pp 146 47 Waines 1992 pp 30 32 Popovic 1999 pp 35 36 Talhami 1977 pp 453 54 Waines 1992 pp 32 33 Popovic 1999 pp 38 39 Talhami 1977 p 454 Talhami 1977 p 454 a b c Talhami 1977 p 455 Waines 1992 p 36 Walker 1933 pp 651 ff Waines 1992 pp 33 133 34 Kennedy 2001 p 154 Popovic 1999 p 10 Waines 1992 pp 36 55 59 109 110 111 121 22 126 132 138 140 195 198 Kennedy 2004 p 178 Popovic 1999 pp 81 130 39 Walker 1933 pp 651 ff Waines 1992 pp 38 ff 108 ff 120 ff 136 137 ff 152 ff 156 158 164 ff Popovic 1999 pp 45 72 McKinney 2004 pp 464 66 Noldeke 1892 pp 152 62 Waines 1992 pp 174 ff 181 ff 186 ff 190 ff 200 ff 204 205 ff Fields 1987 pp 2 ff 6 7 ff Popovic 1999 pp 72 82 McKinney 2004 p 466 Noldeke 1892 pp 162 64 a b Fields 1987 pp 12 ff 50 ff 65 ff 72 ff 80 82 ff 91 ff 98 ff 128 ff Popovic 1999 pp 91 122 McKinney 2004 p 468 Noldeke 1892 pp 164 74 Popovic 1999 p 154 Al Mas udi 1861 1917 v 8 pp 58 61 McKinney 2004 pp 468 69 See for example Waines 1992 pp 51 55 56 123 147 Fields 1987 p 92 Al Mas udi 1861 1917 v 8 p 59 Waines 1992 pp 110 11 132 152 183 204 Popovic 1999 pp 153 54 McKinney 2004 p 465 Noldeke 1892 p 158 McKinney 2004 p 475 who notes a passage in al Tabari detailing cannibal acts during the siege of al Mukhtarah but who expresses doubt on the veracity of the account Al Mas udi 1861 1917 v 8 p 59 Al Tabari s account contains numerous examples of these activities see for example Waines 1992 pp 39 40 131 32 140 178 198 Fields 1987 pp 25 26 33 36 55 121 132 Popovic 1999 pp 153 54 156 57 Lewis 2002 p 115 Noldeke 1892 pp 174 75 Popovic 1999 p 153 Talhami 1977 passim Shaban 1976 pp 101 02 Popovic 1999 p 161 describes al Tabari s account as being by far the best source from every point of view Sources Edit Al Biruni Abu al Rayhan Muhammad ibn Ahmad 1879 C Edward Sachau ed Al Athar al Baqiyah an al Qurun al Khaliyah The Chronology of Ancient Nations An English Version of the Arabic Text of theAthar ul Bakiyaof Al Biruni or Vestiges of the Past Collected and Reduced to Writing by the author in A H 390 1 A D 1000 Translated by C Edward Sachau London W H Allen amp Co p 330 Al Duri Abd al Aziz 2007 Dirasat fi al Usur al Abbasiyya al Muta akhira Studies in Late Abbasid Times Beirut Markaz Dirasat al Wahdah al ʻArabiyah ISBN 978 9953 82 104 7 Fields Philip M ed 1987 The History of al Ṭabari Volume XXXVII The ʿAbbasid Recovery The War Against the Zanj Ends A D 879 893 A H 266 279 Albany NY State University of New York Press ISBN 0 88706 053 6 Furlonge Nigel D 1999 Revisiting the Zanj and Re Visioning Revolt Complexities of the Zanj Conflict 868 883 AD Negro History Bulletin 62 4 7 14 Retrieved 4 November 2015 registration required Heers Jacques 2003 Les Negriers en terres d Islam la premiere traite des noirs VIIe XVIe siecle Paris Perrin ISBN 2 262 01850 2 Ibn al Athir Izz al Din 1987 Al Kamil fi al Tarikh Vol 6 in Arabic Beirut Dar al Ilmiyyah Ibn al Jawzi Abu al Faraj Abd al Rahman ibn Ali 1992 Ata Muhammad Abd al Qadir Ata Mustafa Abd al Qadir eds Al Muntazam fi Ta rikh al Muluk wa al Umam Classification in History of Kings and Nations Vol 12 Beirut Dar al Kutub al Ilmiyya Kennedy Hugh N 2001 The armies of the caliphs military and society in the early Islamic state London and New York Routledge pp 153 ff ISBN 0 415 25093 5 Kennedy Hugh 2004 The Prophet and the Age of the Caliphates The Islamic Near East from the 6th to the 11th Century Second ed Pearson Education Ltd ISBN 0 582 40525 4 Lewis Bernard 2002 The Arabs in History Oxford Oxford University Press pp 112 ff ISBN 0 19 280310 7 Al Mas udi Ali ibn al Husain 1861 1917 Les Prairies D Or Vol 9 vols Ed and Trans Charles Barbier de Meynard and Abel Pavet de Courteille Paris Imprimerie Nationale McKinney Robert C 2004 The Case of Rhyme versus Reason Ibn al Rumi and His Poetics in Context Leiden and Boston Brill ISBN 90 04 13010 1 Noldeke Theodor 1892 Sketches from Eastern History Trans Charles John Sutherland Black London and Edinburgh Adam and Charles Black Popovic Alexandre 1999 The Revolt of African Slaves in Iraq in the 3rd 9th Century Trans Leon King Princeton Markus Wiener Publishers ISBN 1 55876 162 4 Rodriguez Junius P ed 2007 Zanj Slave Revolts Encyclopedia of Slave Resistance and Rebellion Volume 2 Greenwood Publishing Group p 585 ISBN 978 0 313 33273 9 Al Samir Faisal 1954 Thawrat al Zanj The Zanj Rebellion Baghdad Dar al Qari Shaban M A 1976 Islamic History A New Interpretation Vol 2 A D 750 1055 A H 132 448 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 100 ff ISBN 0 521 21198 0 Talhami Ghada Hashem 1977 The Zanj Rebellion Reconsidered The International Journal of African Historical Studies 10 3 443 461 doi 10 2307 216737 JSTOR 216737 Waines David ed 1992 The History of al Ṭabari Volume XXXVI The Revolt of the Zanj A D 869 879 A H 255 265 Albany New York State University of New York Press ISBN 0 7914 0764 0 Walker John July 1933 A Rare Coin of the Zanj The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland 65 3 651 655 doi 10 1017 S1356186300500066 JSTOR 25194841 S2CID 250345335 External links EditThe Largest African Slave Revolt Zapping the Zanj Towards a History of the Zanj Slaves Rebellion Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Zanj Rebellion amp oldid 1173215016, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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