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Abu Tahir al-Jannabi

Abu Tahir Sulayman al-Jannabi (Arabic: ابو طاهر سلیمان الجنّابي, romanizedAbū Tāhir Sulaymān al-Jannābī, Persian: ابوطاهر سلیمانِ گناوه‌ای Abu-Tāher Soleymān-e Genāve'i) was a Persian[1][2] warlord and the ruler of the Qarmatian state in Bahrayn (Eastern Arabia), who in 930 led the sacking of Mecca.

Abu Tahir Sulayman al-Jannabi
Ruler of the Qarmatian state in Bahrayn
Reign923–944
Coronation923
PredecessorAbu'l-Qasim Sa'id
SuccessorSucceeded by his 3 surviving brothers and nephews
Bornc. 906
Bahrayn
Died944
Bahrayn

A younger son of Abu Sa'id al-Jannabi, the founder of the Qarmatian state, Abu Tahir became leader of the state in 923, after ousting his older brother Abu'l-Qasim Sa'id.[3] He immediately began an expansionist phase, raiding Basra that year. He raided Kufa in 927, defeating an Abbasid army in the process, and threatened the Abbasid capital Baghdad in 928 before pillaging much of Iraq when he could not gain entry to the city.[4]

In 930, he led the Qarmatians' most notorious attack when he pillaged Mecca and desecrated Islam's most sacred sites. Unable to gain entry to the city initially, Abu Tahir called upon the right of all Muslims to enter the city and gave his oath that he came in peace. Once inside the city walls the Qarmatian army set about massacring the pilgrims, taunting them with verses of the Quran as they did so.[5] The bodies of the pilgrims were left to rot in the streets.

Early life

Abu Tahir's father Abu Sa'id was a tribal leader who had initiated the militarization of the Qarmatians.[6] Abu Sa'id began preaching against Sunni Islam around 890[7] after being taught by his mentor Hamdan Qarmat, a native of Kufa, from whose name the Qarmatian sect is derived.[7]

Abu Sa'id started off plundering caravans, traders and Persian hajj pilgrims en route to Mecca before gathering a large following.[6] The Qarmatians soon mobilized an army and set out to lay siege to Basra. However, the governor of Basra learned of their preparations and informed the Abbasid Caliph, al-Muktafi, in Baghdad. The Caliph sent the general Abbas bin Umar to save Basra,[6] but Abbas was defeated and his men executed and the Qarmatian siege was successful in capturing the city.[6]

Rise to power

 
Map of eastern and central Arabia in the 9th–10th centuries

Most Arabic sources agree that Abu Sa'id appointed his oldest son, Abu'l-Qasim Sa'id, as his heir, and that Abu Tahir led a revolt against him and usurped his power.[8] Another tradition, by the Kufan anti-Isma'ili polemicist Abu Abd Allah Muhammad ibn Ali ibn Rizam al-Ta'i, on the other hand reports that Abu Sa'id always intended for Abu Tahir to succeed him, and had named Sa'id only as regent. According to this view, Sa'id handed over power to his younger brother (who was then barely ten years old) in 917/918. This report chimes with the story in Ibn Hawqal that Abu Sa'id had instructed his other sons to obey the youngest.[8] Indeed, it is likely that power was nominally invested among all of Abu Sa'id's sons, with Abu Tahir being the dominant among them.[9] Whatever the true events, Abu'l-Qasim was not executed, but lived until his death in 972.[8]

Early reign

Soon after succeeding al-Muktafi, Caliph al-Muqtadir recaptured Basra and ordered the re-fortification of the city. Abu Tahir successfully laid siege to the city once more, defeating the Abbasid army. After capturing Basra the Qarmatians proceeded to loot it and then withdrew.[6] Abu Tahir returned again and ravaged it totally, destroying the grand mosque and reducing the marketplace to ashes.[6] He ruled Bahrayn successfully during this time and corresponded with local and foreign rulers as far as north Africa, but continued successfully fighting off assaults from the Persians, who were allied with the Caliph in Baghdad.[6]

Conquests

Abu Tahir began to frequently raid Muslim pilgrims, reaching as far as the Hijaz region. On one of his raids he succeeded in capturing the Abbasid commander Abu'l-Haija ibn Hamdun. In 926 he led his army deep into Abbasid Iraq, reaching as far north as Kufa, forcing the Abbasids to pay large sums of money in for him to leave the city in peace. On his way home he ravaged the outskirts of Kufa anyway.[6] On his return, Abu Tahir began building palaces in the city of Ahsa, not only for himself but for his fellows, and declared the city his permanent capital.[6] In 928 Caliph al-Muqtadir felt confident enough to once again confront Abu Tahir, calling in his generals Yusuf ibn Abi'l-Saj from Azerbaijan, Mu'nis al-Muzaffar and Harun.[6] After a heavy battle all were beaten and driven back to Baghdad.[6] Abu Tahir destroyed Jazirah Province as a final warning to the Abbasids and returned to Ahsa.[6]

Abu Tahir thought that he had identified the Mahdi as a young Persian prisoner from Isfahan by the name of Abu'l-Fadl al-Isfahani, who claimed to be a descendant of the Sassanid Persian kings.[10][11][12][13][14] Al-Isfahani had been brought back to Bahrayn from the Qarmatians' raid into Iraq in 928.[15] In 931, Abu Tahir turned over the state to this Mahdi-Caliph, said to in fact be a Zoroastrian revivalist with anti-Arab sentiments. He reinstituted the veneration of fire and engaged in burning of religious books during an eighty-day rule. Isfahani also is thought to have some links with established Zoroastrian orthodoxy as the high priest of the Zoroastrians, Esfandiar Adarbad was executed by the Abbasid Caliph after being accused of complicity with Abu Tahir.[16] His reign culminated in the execution of members of Bahrayn's notable families, including members of Abu Tahir's family.[17] Abu Tahir's mother conspired to get rid of Abu'l-Fadl; she faked her death and sent a messenger to call the Mahdi to resurrect her. When he refused, he was exposed as being a normal human, and Abu Tahir's brother Sa'id killed Abu'l-Fadl after the Mahdi had reigned for only eight days.[18] Other accounts say fearing for his own life, Abu Tahir announced that he had been wrong and denounced the al-Isfahani as a false Mahdi. Begging forgiveness from the other notables, Abu Tahir had him executed.[19]

Conquest of Mecca

 
Abu Tahir desecrated Islam's holiest site after gaining entry (Mecca circa 1778)

Before Abu Tahrir's rule, the Qarmatians had launched several raids along the pilgrim routes crossing Arabia. In 906, Qarmatians ambushed the pilgrim caravan returning from Mecca and massacred 20,000 pilgrims.[20] During the Hajj of 930 CE, Abu Tahir led the Qarmatians' most infamous attack when he pillaged Mecca and desecrated Islam's most sacred sites. Unable to gain entry to the city initially, he called upon the right of all Muslims to enter the city and gave his oath that he came in peace. Once inside the city walls the Qarmatian army set about massacring the pilgrims, riding their horses into Masjid al-Haram and charging the praying pilgrims. While killing pilgrims, he taunted them with verses of the Koran[5] and verses of poetry: "I am by God, and by God I am ... he creates creation, and I destroy them".

The attack on Mecca symbolized the Qarmatians' break with the Islamic world; it was believed to have been aimed to prompt the appearance of the Mahdi who would bring about the final cycle of the world and end the era of Islam.[19]

 
The fragmented Black Stone as it appeared in the 1850s, front and side illustrations

The Qarmatians defiled the Zamzam Well with the bodies of pilgrims and the black stone was stolen and taken to the oasis in Eastern Arabia known as al-Aḥsāʾ, where it remained until the Abbasids ransomed it in 952 CE. According to historian al-Juwayni, the stone was returned 22 years later in 951 under mysterious circumstances. Wrapped in a sack, it was thrown into the Great Mosque of Kufa in Iraq, accompanied by a note saying "By command we took it, and by command we have brought it back." The theft and removal of the Black Stone caused it to break into seven pieces.[21][22][23] the basic shape and structure of the Kaaba have not changed since then[24][25]

The sack of Mecca followed millenarian excitement among the Qarmatians (and in Persia) over the conjunction of Saturn and Jupiter in 928. Bahrain became the seat of the Qarmatian Mahdi-Caliph from Isfahan who abolished Sharīa law. The new Mahdi also changed the qibla of prayer from Mecca to that of fire, a specifically Zoroastrian practice. Some scholars take the view that "they may not have been Isamailis at all at the outset, and their conduct and customs gave plausibility to the belief that they were not merely heretics but bitter enemies of Islam."[26][27]

Final years and death

Abu Tahir resumed the reins of the Qarmatian state and again began attacks on pilgrims crossing Arabia. Attempts by the Abbasids and Fatimids to persuade him to return the Black Stone were rejected.

He died in 944 around the age of 38, due to smallpox.[28] He was succeeded by his three surviving sons and nephews.[29]

See also

References

  1. ^ Carra de Vaux & Hodgson 1965, p. 452.
  2. ^ Madelung, Wilferd (1983). "ABŪ SAʿĪD JANNĀBĪ". In Yarshater, Ehsan (ed.). Encyclopædia Iranica, Volume I/4: Abū Manṣūr Heravı̄–Adat. London and New York: Routledge & Kegan Paul. pp. 380–381. ISBN 978-0-7100-9093-5
  3. ^ Daftary 1990, p. 160.
  4. ^ Halm 1996, p. 255.
  5. ^ a b Halm 1996, pp. 255 f..
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Akbar Shah Khan Najibabadi (2001). Salafi, Muhammad Tahir (ed.). The History of Islam. Vol. 2. Darussalam. ISBN 978-9960-892-93-1.
  7. ^ a b Wynbrandt, James (2004). A Brief History of Saudi Arabia. Infobase Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4381-0830-8.
  8. ^ a b c Madelung 1996, p. 37.
  9. ^ Madelung 1996, p. 39.
  10. ^ Imagining the End: Visions of Apocalypse By Abbas Amanat, Magnus Thorkell - Page 123
  11. ^ Women and the Fatimids in the World of Islam - Page 26 by Delia Cortese, Simonetta Calderini
  12. ^ Early Philosophical Shiism: The Ismaili Neoplatonism of Abū Yaʻqūb Al-Sijistānī - Page 161 by Paul Ernest Walke
  13. ^ The Other God: Dualist Religions from Antiquity to the Cathar Heresy by Yuri Stoyanov
  14. ^ Classical Islam: A History, 600–1258 - Page 113 by Gustave Edmund Von Grunebaum
  15. ^ Halm 1996, p. 257.
  16. ^ "CARMATIANS – Encyclopaedia Iranica". iranicaonline.org. Retrieved 2020-10-28.
  17. ^ Farhad Daftary, The Assassin Legends: Myths of the Isma'ilis, IB Tauris, 1994, p21
  18. ^ Delia Cortese; Simonetta Calderini (2006). Women and the Fatimids in the World of Islam. Edinburgh University Press. pp. 26–. ISBN 978-0-7486-1733-3.
  19. ^ a b Daftary 1990, p. 162.
  20. ^ John Joseph Saunders, p. 130.
  21. ^ . Overview of World Religions. St. Martin's College. Archived from the original on 2007-04-28.
  22. ^ Cyril Glasse, New Encyclopedia of Islam, p. 245. Rowman Altamira, 2001. ISBN 0-7591-0190-6
  23. ^ "Black Stone of Mecca". 'Encyclopædia Britannica'
  24. ^ Javed Ahmad Ghamidi. 'The Rituals of Hajj and 'Umrah 7 March 2010 at the Wayback Machine, Mizan, Al-Mawrid
  25. ^ Peters, F. E. (1994). Mecca : a literary history of the Muslim Holy Land. Mazal Holocaust Collection. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-03267-X. OCLC 30671443.
  26. ^ John Joseph Saunders, A History of Medieval Islam, Routledge 1978 p130
  27. ^ Syed, Muzaffar Husain; Akhtar, Syed Saud; Usmani, B. D. (2011-09-14). Concise History of Islam. Vij Books India Pvt Ltd. ISBN 978-93-82573-47-0.
  28. ^ Carra de Vaux, B. & Hodgson, M. G. S. (1965). "al-D̲j̲annābī, Abū Saʿīd Ḥasan b. Bahrām". In Lewis, B.; Pellat, Ch. & Schacht, J. (eds.). The Encyclopaedia of Islam, New Edition, Volume II: C–G. Leiden: E. J. Brill. p. 453. OCLC 495469475.
  29. ^ Halm 1996, p. 383.

Sources

tahir, jannabi, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, september, . This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Abu Tahir al Jannabi news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Abu Tahir Sulayman al Jannabi Arabic ابو طاهر سلیمان الجن ابي romanized Abu Tahir Sulayman al Jannabi Persian ابوطاهر سلیمان گناوه ای Abu Taher Soleyman e Genave i was a Persian 1 2 warlord and the ruler of the Qarmatian state in Bahrayn Eastern Arabia who in 930 led the sacking of Mecca Abu Tahir Sulayman al JannabiRuler of the Qarmatian state in BahraynReign923 944Coronation923PredecessorAbu l Qasim Sa idSuccessorSucceeded by his 3 surviving brothers and nephewsBornc 906 BahraynDied944BahraynA younger son of Abu Sa id al Jannabi the founder of the Qarmatian state Abu Tahir became leader of the state in 923 after ousting his older brother Abu l Qasim Sa id 3 He immediately began an expansionist phase raiding Basra that year He raided Kufa in 927 defeating an Abbasid army in the process and threatened the Abbasid capital Baghdad in 928 before pillaging much of Iraq when he could not gain entry to the city 4 In 930 he led the Qarmatians most notorious attack when he pillaged Mecca and desecrated Islam s most sacred sites Unable to gain entry to the city initially Abu Tahir called upon the right of all Muslims to enter the city and gave his oath that he came in peace Once inside the city walls the Qarmatian army set about massacring the pilgrims taunting them with verses of the Quran as they did so 5 The bodies of the pilgrims were left to rot in the streets Contents 1 Early life 2 Rise to power 3 Early reign 4 Conquests 5 Conquest of Mecca 6 Final years and death 7 See also 8 References 9 SourcesEarly life EditAbu Tahir s father Abu Sa id was a tribal leader who had initiated the militarization of the Qarmatians 6 Abu Sa id began preaching against Sunni Islam around 890 7 after being taught by his mentor Hamdan Qarmat a native of Kufa from whose name the Qarmatian sect is derived 7 Abu Sa id started off plundering caravans traders and Persian hajj pilgrims en route to Mecca before gathering a large following 6 The Qarmatians soon mobilized an army and set out to lay siege to Basra However the governor of Basra learned of their preparations and informed the Abbasid Caliph al Muktafi in Baghdad The Caliph sent the general Abbas bin Umar to save Basra 6 but Abbas was defeated and his men executed and the Qarmatian siege was successful in capturing the city 6 Rise to power Edit Map of eastern and central Arabia in the 9th 10th centuries Most Arabic sources agree that Abu Sa id appointed his oldest son Abu l Qasim Sa id as his heir and that Abu Tahir led a revolt against him and usurped his power 8 Another tradition by the Kufan anti Isma ili polemicist Abu Abd Allah Muhammad ibn Ali ibn Rizam al Ta i on the other hand reports that Abu Sa id always intended for Abu Tahir to succeed him and had named Sa id only as regent According to this view Sa id handed over power to his younger brother who was then barely ten years old in 917 918 This report chimes with the story in Ibn Hawqal that Abu Sa id had instructed his other sons to obey the youngest 8 Indeed it is likely that power was nominally invested among all of Abu Sa id s sons with Abu Tahir being the dominant among them 9 Whatever the true events Abu l Qasim was not executed but lived until his death in 972 8 Early reign EditSoon after succeeding al Muktafi Caliph al Muqtadir recaptured Basra and ordered the re fortification of the city Abu Tahir successfully laid siege to the city once more defeating the Abbasid army After capturing Basra the Qarmatians proceeded to loot it and then withdrew 6 Abu Tahir returned again and ravaged it totally destroying the grand mosque and reducing the marketplace to ashes 6 He ruled Bahrayn successfully during this time and corresponded with local and foreign rulers as far as north Africa but continued successfully fighting off assaults from the Persians who were allied with the Caliph in Baghdad 6 Conquests EditFurther information Qarmatian invasion of Iraq Abu Tahir began to frequently raid Muslim pilgrims reaching as far as the Hijaz region On one of his raids he succeeded in capturing the Abbasid commander Abu l Haija ibn Hamdun In 926 he led his army deep into Abbasid Iraq reaching as far north as Kufa forcing the Abbasids to pay large sums of money in for him to leave the city in peace On his way home he ravaged the outskirts of Kufa anyway 6 On his return Abu Tahir began building palaces in the city of Ahsa not only for himself but for his fellows and declared the city his permanent capital 6 In 928 Caliph al Muqtadir felt confident enough to once again confront Abu Tahir calling in his generals Yusuf ibn Abi l Saj from Azerbaijan Mu nis al Muzaffar and Harun 6 After a heavy battle all were beaten and driven back to Baghdad 6 Abu Tahir destroyed Jazirah Province as a final warning to the Abbasids and returned to Ahsa 6 Abu Tahir thought that he had identified the Mahdi as a young Persian prisoner from Isfahan by the name of Abu l Fadl al Isfahani who claimed to be a descendant of the Sassanid Persian kings 10 11 12 13 14 Al Isfahani had been brought back to Bahrayn from the Qarmatians raid into Iraq in 928 15 In 931 Abu Tahir turned over the state to this Mahdi Caliph said to in fact be a Zoroastrian revivalist with anti Arab sentiments He reinstituted the veneration of fire and engaged in burning of religious books during an eighty day rule Isfahani also is thought to have some links with established Zoroastrian orthodoxy as the high priest of the Zoroastrians Esfandiar Adarbad was executed by the Abbasid Caliph after being accused of complicity with Abu Tahir 16 His reign culminated in the execution of members of Bahrayn s notable families including members of Abu Tahir s family 17 Abu Tahir s mother conspired to get rid of Abu l Fadl she faked her death and sent a messenger to call the Mahdi to resurrect her When he refused he was exposed as being a normal human and Abu Tahir s brother Sa id killed Abu l Fadl after the Mahdi had reigned for only eight days 18 Other accounts say fearing for his own life Abu Tahir announced that he had been wrong and denounced the al Isfahani as a false Mahdi Begging forgiveness from the other notables Abu Tahir had him executed 19 Conquest of Mecca Edit Abu Tahir desecrated Islam s holiest site after gaining entry Mecca circa 1778 Before Abu Tahrir s rule the Qarmatians had launched several raids along the pilgrim routes crossing Arabia In 906 Qarmatians ambushed the pilgrim caravan returning from Mecca and massacred 20 000 pilgrims 20 During the Hajj of 930 CE Abu Tahir led the Qarmatians most infamous attack when he pillaged Mecca and desecrated Islam s most sacred sites Unable to gain entry to the city initially he called upon the right of all Muslims to enter the city and gave his oath that he came in peace Once inside the city walls the Qarmatian army set about massacring the pilgrims riding their horses into Masjid al Haram and charging the praying pilgrims While killing pilgrims he taunted them with verses of the Koran 5 and verses of poetry I am by God and by God I am he creates creation and I destroy them The attack on Mecca symbolized the Qarmatians break with the Islamic world it was believed to have been aimed to prompt the appearance of the Mahdi who would bring about the final cycle of the world and end the era of Islam 19 The fragmented Black Stone as it appeared in the 1850s front and side illustrations The Qarmatians defiled the Zamzam Well with the bodies of pilgrims and the black stone was stolen and taken to the oasis in Eastern Arabia known as al Aḥsaʾ where it remained until the Abbasids ransomed it in 952 CE According to historian al Juwayni the stone was returned 22 years later in 951 under mysterious circumstances Wrapped in a sack it was thrown into the Great Mosque of Kufa in Iraq accompanied by a note saying By command we took it and by command we have brought it back The theft and removal of the Black Stone caused it to break into seven pieces 21 22 23 the basic shape and structure of the Kaaba have not changed since then 24 25 The sack of Mecca followed millenarian excitement among the Qarmatians and in Persia over the conjunction of Saturn and Jupiter in 928 Bahrain became the seat of the Qarmatian Mahdi Caliph from Isfahan who abolished Sharia law The new Mahdi also changed the qibla of prayer from Mecca to that of fire a specifically Zoroastrian practice Some scholars take the view that they may not have been Isamailis at all at the outset and their conduct and customs gave plausibility to the belief that they were not merely heretics but bitter enemies of Islam 26 27 Final years and death EditAbu Tahir resumed the reins of the Qarmatian state and again began attacks on pilgrims crossing Arabia Attempts by the Abbasids and Fatimids to persuade him to return the Black Stone were rejected He died in 944 around the age of 38 due to smallpox 28 He was succeeded by his three surviving sons and nephews 29 See also EditHistory of Bahrain 1979 Grand Mosque seizureReferences Edit Carra de Vaux amp Hodgson 1965 p 452 Madelung Wilferd 1983 ABu SAʿiD JANNABi In Yarshater Ehsan ed Encyclopaedia Iranica Volume I 4 Abu Manṣur Heravi Adat London and New York Routledge amp Kegan Paul pp 380 381 ISBN 978 0 7100 9093 5 Daftary 1990 p 160 Halm 1996 p 255 a b Halm 1996 pp 255 f a b c d e f g h i j k l Akbar Shah Khan Najibabadi 2001 Salafi Muhammad Tahir ed The History of Islam Vol 2 Darussalam ISBN 978 9960 892 93 1 a b Wynbrandt James 2004 A Brief History of Saudi Arabia Infobase Publishing ISBN 978 1 4381 0830 8 a b c Madelung 1996 p 37 Madelung 1996 p 39 Imagining the End Visions of Apocalypse By Abbas Amanat Magnus Thorkell Page 123 Women and the Fatimids in the World of Islam Page 26 by Delia Cortese Simonetta Calderini Early Philosophical Shiism The Ismaili Neoplatonism of Abu Yaʻqub Al Sijistani Page 161 by Paul Ernest Walke The Other God Dualist Religions from Antiquity to the Cathar Heresy by Yuri Stoyanov Classical Islam A History 600 1258 Page 113 by Gustave Edmund Von Grunebaum Halm 1996 p 257 CARMATIANS Encyclopaedia Iranica iranicaonline org Retrieved 2020 10 28 Farhad Daftary The Assassin Legends Myths of the Isma ilis IB Tauris 1994 p21 Delia Cortese Simonetta Calderini 2006 Women and the Fatimids in the World of Islam Edinburgh University Press pp 26 ISBN 978 0 7486 1733 3 a b Daftary 1990 p 162 John Joseph Saunders p 130 Qarmatiyyah Overview of World Religions St Martin s College Archived from the original on 2007 04 28 Cyril Glasse New Encyclopedia of Islam p 245 Rowman Altamira 2001 ISBN 0 7591 0190 6 Black Stone of Mecca Encyclopaedia Britannica Javed Ahmad Ghamidi The Rituals of Hajj and Umrah Archived 7 March 2010 at the Wayback Machine Mizan Al Mawrid Peters F E 1994 Mecca a literary history of the Muslim Holy Land Mazal Holocaust Collection Princeton N J Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 03267 X OCLC 30671443 John Joseph Saunders A History of Medieval Islam Routledge 1978 p130 Syed Muzaffar Husain Akhtar Syed Saud Usmani B D 2011 09 14 Concise History of Islam Vij Books India Pvt Ltd ISBN 978 93 82573 47 0 Carra de Vaux B amp Hodgson M G S 1965 al D j annabi Abu Saʿid Ḥasan b Bahram In Lewis B Pellat Ch amp Schacht J eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam New Edition Volume II C G Leiden E J Brill p 453 OCLC 495469475 Halm 1996 p 383 Sources EditCanard M 1965 al D j annabi Abu Ṭahir In Lewis B Pellat Ch amp Schacht J eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam New Edition Volume II C G Leiden E J Brill pp 452 454 OCLC 495469475 Carra de Vaux B amp Hodgson M G S 1965 al D j annabi Abu Saʿid Ḥasan b Bahram In Lewis B Pellat Ch amp Schacht J eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam New Edition Volume II C G Leiden E J Brill p 452 OCLC 495469475 Daftary Farhad 1995 The Assassin Legends Myths of the Isma ilis Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 978 1 85043 950 9 Retrieved 26 October 2021 Daftary Farhad 1990 The Ismaʿi li s Their History and Doctrines Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 37019 6 Madelung Wilferd 1996 The Fatimids and the Qarmatis of Bahrayn In Daftary Farhad ed Mediaeval Isma ili History and Thought Cambridge University Press pp 21 73 ISBN 978 0 521 00310 0 Halm Heinz 1996 The Empire of the Mahdi The Rise of the Fatimids Brill ISBN 978 90 04 10056 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Abu Tahir al Jannabi amp oldid 1120456725, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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