Statue of Baghdad founder Caliph Al-Mansur, blown up by persons unknown in 2005
In a previous post Anatomy of an Empire I described how the Umayyad caliph Abd al Malik inherited a chaotic and fragmented caliphate and transformed it into an effectively governed empire stretching from AndalucĂa to Afghanistan. Despite some military reverses during the reign of his son Hisham, the fourth son of Abd al Malik to hold the caliphate, the heartland of this empire remained intact and stable at his death in 743. Under a series of short-lived successors however, the cracks rapidly began to appear.
Hisham was succeeded by his nephew Al Walid II, who was regarded by many as unfit to rule,
being as he was a playboy, a drunk and a layabout. Worse still, he immediately
attempted to gain acknowledgement of his young children as his designated
successors. This was bitterly opposed by other members of the Umayyad family
and the playboy now turned tyrant; arresting, torturing and banishing those who
opposed him, including his own cousins. It did not take long for opposition to
build and within a year Al Walid had been murdered in favour of his cousin
Yazid. The new caliph was a far more promising prospect but within months he
had died from natural causes, leaving his far less effective brother Ibrahim to
face the challenge of their more distant cousin Marwan.
Marwan
was the governor of Armenia and he had at his back an army of veterans toughened
from years of fighting against the Khazars. He marched on Damascus and soon
overthrew the regime of Ibrahim. He faced widespread opposition however from
the Yamani tribal faction in Syria and from those perennial troublemakers the Kharijites
and Alids in Iraq, all of whom formed an unlikely alliance against him. By 748
his forces had bludgeoned these various adversaries into grudging submission
but the fatal challenge to Marwan II and the rule of the Umayyad family had
already begun and would come from further afield.
It was
not a new idea that the Caliphate should be held only by a member of the family
of the Prophet. To date all uprisings against Umayyad rule aimed at achieving
this had been centred on Iraq and had been proclaimed specifically in the cause
of the direct descendants of the Prophet's son-in-law Ali. Now however a new movement was gaining
momentum, calling for the overthrow of the corrupt Umayyads and their
replacement by an unspecified member of
the Prophet’s family, with a promise of equality for all Muslims. The people
behind this movement were the Abbasids; descendants of Mohammed’s uncle
Al-Abbas, whose claim was perhaps not as legitimate as that of the Alids but
was certainly strong enough to challenge the position of the Umayyads. To begin
with however, the leading Abbasids kept a low profile. Later those who adhered
to the view that only descendants in the direct bloodline of Ali had the right
to rule would condemn the Abbasids as usurpers no different from the Umayyads.
The remains of the massive ramparts of Merv- cradle of the Abbasid revolution
The
genius of the Abbasid revolution lay in the fact that it was declared in the
name of the family of the Prophet but without naming a specific candidate for
the Caliphate. This had the effect of broadening the appeal of Abbasids’ cause
and their base of support without alienating any of their potential supporters
who favoured a particular claimant. The Abbasid forces marched beneath black
banners in mourning for those members of the Prophet’s family who had been
martyred by the usurping Umayyads. The veterans of Khurasan overwhelmingly
defeated two Umayyad armies that had been sent to intercept their march
westwards. They then forced their way across the Euphrates and captured Kufa in
749.
The
Umayyads had attempted to end the rebellion by cutting off the head of the
serpent; intercepting and murdering the head of the Abbasid clan Ibrahim as he
made a high profile pilgrimage to Mecca, dispensing enormous sums in alms along
the way. In Kufa the Abbasid supporters moved quickly to declare his brother Abu’l
Abbas as caliph Al-Saffah. Marwan II now led his forces in person against Kufa
and the two armies met on the River Zab, a tributary of the Euphrates. The
Syrian forces charged the Abbasid army with the full force of their cavalry
whilst Abu Muslim’s men dismounted and repelled their enemies with a bristling
a wall of spears. This tactic, mastered against the wild charges of the Turks
on the north-eastern frontier, was exercised with discipline and the rebels won
the day. The Umayyad forces were routed with heavy losses and Marwan II fled to
Egypt. Here he was soon hunted down and was run to ground and killed near
Fustat, resisting to the last with sword in hand. So ended the Umayyad
Caliphate.
The
victors were taking no chances and resolved upon a complete purge of the old
ruling house. Having occupied Damascus and desecrated the tombs of all the
Umayyad rulers with the exception of Umar II, who was respected for his piety, the Abbasid conquerors declared
an amnesty and invited all of the male Umayyad family members to a banquet in
order to bury the hatchet. Seventy two leading members of the clan were foolish
enough to accept the invitation and were massacred. The only notable escapee
was Abd Al-Rahman, who was the grandson of the caliph Hisham. Fleeing Damascus,
the fugitive Abd al Rahman made his way to Ifriqiya
where he found safety amongst the family of his Berber mother. Eventually he
reached Al Andalus where he found
widespread support for his cause and was able to establish himself as the ruler
of the breakaway territory. Naturally he did not recognise the sovereignty of
the Abbasids and their leading supporters in Al Andalus were swiftly eliminated. Their severed and pickled heads
were sent to Kairouan, the westernmost outpost of caliphal authority, as a grim
warning not to interfere in the affairs of Al
Andalus.
The great mosque of Kufa - pictured in 1915
Meanwhile,
back in Iraq, the Abbasids had too many potential rivals closer to home to
concern themselves overmuch with the last surviving Umayyad. In pure military
terms they held all the aces. The cities of Iraq had not fielded an army worthy
of the name for a century and the army of Syria which had been the foundation
of Umayyad power had been crushed by the army of Khurasan. The winning of
battles now gave way to the winning of hearts and minds. Kufa, perennial
trouble spot under the Umayyads, now served as capital for the new dynasty.
With Al Saffah installed as caliph, the Abbasid rabbit was finally out of the
hat. The revolution launched in the name of sweeping away the corrupt Umayyads
and instead placing a true descendant of the Prophet on the caliphal throne,
had delivered power into the hands of an obscure descendant of the Prophet’s
uncle. Would this truly satisfy the malcontents of Iraq?
The
Abbasid approach was a classic iron fist in a velvet glove. Members of the Alid
family were summoned to the capital, received with honour and showered with
gifts in return for their pledges of allegiance. Meanwhile the leader of the
Kufan resistance to the Umayyads, whose loyalty to the new regime was suspect
despite having delivered the city up to the Abbasids, was set upon in the
street and murdered. Officially the deed was blamed on the extremist Kharijites.
Al
Saffah died in Kufa in 754 and his death precipitated a brief struggle for the
caliphate between his brother Abu Ja’far and their uncle Abd Allah. In a
standoff outside Mosul between the army of Khurasan commanded by Abu Muslim and
Abd Allah’s supporters gathered from the remnants of the army of Syria, Abd
Allah’s army disintegrated in mass defection and desertion and his challenge
fizzled out. Abu Ja’far now claimed the caliphate and took the name Al Mansur;
the victorious.
Under
the rule of Al Mansur, the foundations of Abbasid rule would be sunk deep into
the shifting soil of Iraq. In contrast to his descendants, whose love of luxury
and ostentation would become legendary, Al Mansur was a caliph of the old
school. Austere, miserly, pious and utterly ruthless, he set out to stamp his
authority on the caliphate and would brook no rival. First to be eliminated was
the very man who had just saved his throne.
Abu
Muslim had built the army that had swept the Abbasids to power. He had led it
from victory to victory over the armies of the Umayyads. He was loved by the
Khurasani soldiers who had followed him. Now he was preparing to return to
Khurasan to govern it in the name of the Abbasids. Al Mansur however was not
prepared to tolerate so popular a leader in possession of such a power base.
Abu Muslim was summoned to Kufa where the caliph received him in the austere
surroundings of his tent. At a signal from Mansur his bodyguards set upon Abu
Muslim and cut him down. His body was wrapped in a carpet and then dumped into
the Tigris at night. Faced with the fait
accompli of their leader’s execution, the majority of the Khurasani army
accepted the situation with barely a grumble. His die hard supporters were
swiftly eliminated.
Gold dinar issued by Al-Mansur
Mansur
had conducted a manhunt for the Pure Soul but the would-be rebel successfully
evaded capture. As his frustration mounted, Mansur’s regime became increasingly
repressive and members of the Alid family in Kufa and further afield were
arrested and interrogated and many were ‘disappeared’. After Mansur's death, his successor Mahdi discovered a store room filled with the corpses of members of the Alid family; men, women and children. Each had a label attached to their ear identifying them. The bodies were buried in secret in a mass grave.
By 762 Mohammed could stand no more and although his plans for a coordinated uprising were not fully complete, he had himself proclaimed caliph in the main mosque in Medina, orchestrating a bloodless coup against the Abbasid governor. The struggle would not remain bloodless for long. Medina was an unwise choice of city to launch a rebellion, chosen more for symbolic than strategic reasons. Al Mansur moved quickly to cut off supply routes from Egypt and Syria before sending an army under the command of his cousin Isa. For the defence of Medina, Mohammed looked to his namesake the Prophet for inspiration and dug a defensive trench as had been done in the earliest days of Islam to protect the city from attack by the unbelievers of Mecca. The tactic on this occasion was unsuccessful and the defences were swiftly breached. All but a few hundred of his followers deserted him and Mohammed fell fighting bravely so we are told, wielding the sword of the Prophet himself. His head was cut off and taken to Al Mansur, who had it displayed on a silver platter. Ibrahim’s revolt in Basra, which should have been coordinated with Mohammed’s rising in Medina, followed two months after, when Medina was already hopelessly surrounded. Once Mohammed had been despatched, Isa turned his attention to Ibramhim, who had now been proclaimed caliph in turn. Ibrahim’s supporters were hopelessly divided and he was plagued by infighting, indecision and desertion. Finally he marched on Kufa but prevaricated again and Isa came upon him encamped in open country. In the battle that followed the Alid forces were routed and Ibrahim was fatally wounded.
By 762 Mohammed could stand no more and although his plans for a coordinated uprising were not fully complete, he had himself proclaimed caliph in the main mosque in Medina, orchestrating a bloodless coup against the Abbasid governor. The struggle would not remain bloodless for long. Medina was an unwise choice of city to launch a rebellion, chosen more for symbolic than strategic reasons. Al Mansur moved quickly to cut off supply routes from Egypt and Syria before sending an army under the command of his cousin Isa. For the defence of Medina, Mohammed looked to his namesake the Prophet for inspiration and dug a defensive trench as had been done in the earliest days of Islam to protect the city from attack by the unbelievers of Mecca. The tactic on this occasion was unsuccessful and the defences were swiftly breached. All but a few hundred of his followers deserted him and Mohammed fell fighting bravely so we are told, wielding the sword of the Prophet himself. His head was cut off and taken to Al Mansur, who had it displayed on a silver platter. Ibrahim’s revolt in Basra, which should have been coordinated with Mohammed’s rising in Medina, followed two months after, when Medina was already hopelessly surrounded. Once Mohammed had been despatched, Isa turned his attention to Ibramhim, who had now been proclaimed caliph in turn. Ibrahim’s supporters were hopelessly divided and he was plagued by infighting, indecision and desertion. Finally he marched on Kufa but prevaricated again and Isa came upon him encamped in open country. In the battle that followed the Alid forces were routed and Ibrahim was fatally wounded.
A reconstruction of Abbasid Baghdad
With his
rivals vanquished, al Mansur looked to the future and the establishment of a
new capital for his dynasty which would provide both security and control away
from the seething masses of Kufa. The caliph selected a site one hundred miles to
the north of Kufa, close to the ruins of the old Persian capital of Ctesiphon
and even more ancient Babylon. It was, as the presence of these earlier
imperial cities showed, a natural hub with good communication by ancient river
and road networks to all four corners of the caliphate.
The
village of Baghdad on the west bank of the Tigris was chosen for the site of al
Mansur’s new capital in consultation with Persian astrologers who advised the
date of 1st August 762 as being most auspicious for its founding,
with construction beginning under the sign of Leo. Al Mansur may also have looked
to Persia for inspiration in the design of his city, which he called Medina al
Salaam; the city of peace. The Sassanid Persian rulers were gone but their
cities still stood. Based perhaps on the model of some Persian royal cities,
Mansur’s Baghdad was planned as a circular city with a diameter of some 1.7
miles. Two major thoroughfares passing through its double circuit wall at
four domed gates situated at the cardinal points and met in the centre,
where a mosque and palace were constructed. Others see the influence of Greek
learning and the writings of Euclid in Baghdad’s pleasing geometry. Whether
Mansur was a fan of Greek knowledge or Persian architecture is unknown but he
was a pragmatic man. Baghdad was designed in a logical fashion which met the
caliph’s needs for good communications and strong defences. An encircling moat
fed by the Tigris protected the approach to the outer wall. Within the city
walls were the residences of al Mansur’s civil and military administrators and
the bureaucratic apparatus of the state. The city police force and Mansur’s
palace guard were housed at the centre beside the royal palace, which was
surmounted by a large green dome. The palace featured a great iwan, another Persian architectural
innovation; a huge archway opening into an audience chamber where the caliph
would hear the complaints of his subjects. Unlike those who followed him,
Mansur did not cut himself off from the ordinary populace in glorious isolation
but made himself available to any who sought his judgement or intercession and
preached in the great mosque of his capital on Fridays.
The city
would soon spill out beyond the limits of the original circular layout. Land on
the east bank of the Tigris was parcelled out for development and Mansur’s
leading courtiers snapped up prime locations and made fortunes from selling on
land at many times its original value as they supervised the building of a whole
new city, which featured a separate palace for Mansur’s son and heir Mahdi,
commenced in 768. Foremost among those who had risen to power under Mansur were
the chamberlain Rabi ibn Yunus; a former slave from Medina and Khalid ibn
Barmak, a noble from Balkh in what is now Afghanistan, who had converted to
Islam and come west with the conquerors. He became Mansur’s vizier in 770.
Three generations of the Barmakid family would serve the Abbasid caliphs in the
highest offices of state and they would become the wealthiest and most powerful
family in the caliphate until their dramatic fall from grace. They would
dictate through their patronage who would rise and who would fall in the court
of Mansur and his successors and would play a key role in ensuring the smooth
transition of power from one generation of Abbasids to the next. It was the
Barmakids, rather than the caliphs whom they served who lit the touch paper of
the great quest for knowledge for which early Abbasid Baghdad is remembered as
a powerhouse of learning; commissioning translations of the works of Greek and
Indian scholars. Khalid the Barmakid is also credited with saving the ruins of
the Sassanid palace at Ctesiphon, dissuading Mansur, who tolerated no rival even
where architecture was concerned, to leave it standing as a symbol of Islam’s
victory over Persia.
The Sassanid palace at Ctesiphon may have inspired the design of Mansur's palace
Mansur
died on pilgrimage to Mecca in 775. He had set out in the knowledge that he was
unlikely to return, since his health was failing and he wished to make the act
of pilgrimage one last time. He had not reached Mecca before he became too ill
to continue. The caliph died peacefully and his death was kept secret by Rabi
ibn Yunus until he had gathered all the great and the good from amongst those
present on the expedition and extracted from them an oath of loyalty to
Mansur’s son Mahdi, reading from a document which he claimed was the caliph’s
last testament. With his path to the succession smoothed, Mahdi took up the
reins of power and naturally entrusted much of the running of the state to the
men he trusted; Rabi to whom he owed his uncontested accession to the caliphate,
and Yahya the son of Khalid the Barmakid, who was his closest friend. Baghdad’s
golden age lay ahead, but that's a post for another time.
Enjoyed this post? Why not check out my book The Battles are the Best Bits
Enjoyed this post? Why not check out my book The Battles are the Best Bits