Muslim Spain and Portugal PDF
Muslim Spain and Portugal PDF
Muslim Spain and Portugal PDF
Portugal
A Political History of al-Andalus
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HUGH KENNEDY
First published 1996 by Pearson Education Limited
Published 2014 by Routledge
2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon 0X14 4RN
711 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10017
Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business
Copyright 1996, Taylor & Francis
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any
form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented,
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L i s t of M a p s viii
Acknowledgements
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V
vi Muslim Spain and Portugal
11. T h e N a s r i d s of G r a n a d a 273
Ibn al-Ahmar and the foundation of the Nasrid
kingdom, 1232-73 273
Nasrids, Merinids and Castilians, 1273-1333 280
The golden years of the Nasrid kingdom:
Ysuf I and Muhammad V , 1333-91 288
Internal divisions and external threats, 1391-1464 292
The decline and fall of the Kingdom of Granada,
1464-92 299
F a r e w e l l to a l - A n d a l u s 305
A p p e n d i x 1: G o v e r n o r s of a l - A n d a l u s a n d
Taifa Kings 309
A p p e n d i x 2 : F a m i l y Trees of the R u l i n g
D y n a s t i e s of a l - A n d a l u s 312
Bibliography 316
Maps 325
Index 329
L i s t of Maps
viii
This book is dedicated to my daughter
Katharine, in memory of happy days in
Ubeda and Granada.
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ix
Acknowledgements
x
Note on Names and Dates
xi
Glossary
xii
Glossary xiii
between 711, the date of the first Muslim invasion, and 1492 when
the last independent Muslim power, the Kingdom of Granada, was
destroyed.
By political history I do not simply mean the narratives of rulers
and battles, though these are of course important, but also the
understanding of the structures which lie behind political events
and decisions. The most obvious of these structures were the rul-
ing dynasties, where they came from, who their most powerful sup-
porters were and how they attempted to secure a justification and
legitimacy for the exercise of power. The most important function
of a pre-modern Islamic state was the raising and paying of the
military forces. This determined the composition of the elite, the
system of taxation and revenue raising and ultimately the success or
failure of the regime. The structure of the military is an essential
part of political history. Another concern is the reach and range
of government and the extent to which the rulers i n Cordoba,
Seville or Granada were able to make their authority felt through-
out al-Andalus. This i n turn leads to the examination of local elites
and pressure groups and to the consideration of their origins, nature
and power.
This is not a history of the Reconquista. O f course the Christian
powers to the north always affected the history of al-Andalus, and
from the eleventh century onwards they became a threatening and
dominant presence, but the struggle against the Christians was only
one, and not always the most important, concern of the rulers of
al-Andalus: maintaining their own authority i n the Muslim-held areas
was usually the first priority, and the affairs of North Africa were
often as pressing as those of the Christian frontier. This work at-
tempts to see al-Andalus as a Muslim political society among others
like it. Its rulers and administrators were always keenly aware that
their land was part of a wider Muslim commonwealth and it was to
xiv
Introduction XV
1
2 Muslim Spain and Portugal
to have been a strong feeling among the nobility against the estab-
lishment of a purely hereditary succession and perhaps that a lin-
eage which had held the crown too long should be replaced.
Under the king, the chief men of the state were the nobles,
mostly of Gothic origin, and the bishops, mostly recruited from the
Hispano-Roman landowning class, although the distinctions between
these two groups must have largely disappeared by the beginning
of the eighth century. Besides providing spiritual leadership, the
bishops were also among the largest landowners and most power-
ful political figures i n the land. The nobles, who sometimes bore
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the title of dux (duke) or comes (count), were also owners of large,
often underexploited estates cultivated by semi-free peasants. It was
the nobles too who provided the army: apart from a royal guard,
there was no standing army and the nobles brought their followers
in response to the royal summons and the king might reward them
with gifts of gold or silver. In general this simple military system
seems to have functioned fairly successfully, but it probably meant
that the bulk of the troops owed their first loyalties to their lords,
rather than to the monarchy.
It is impossible to make any precise assessment of the popula-
tion or economy of the peninsula. It has been plausibly suggested 1
that the population had been about six million i n the early Roman
period but had been reduced by plague and war to four million by
the later Visigothic period. Archaeological evidence shows that the
large open cities of the earlier period had shrunk into small forti-
fied settlements. Country estates and their buildings were certainly
more primitive than the great latifundia and villas of the imperial
Roman period.
Economic life was almost entirely localised: there is little evi-
dence of long-distance trade and both the small towns and the
large estates were effectively economically self-sufficient. The circu-
lation of coinage was extremely limited and most transactions were
conducted by barter.
Later Visigothic Spain and Portugal was a fairly stable society
and, apart from a limited Byzantine incursion around Cartagena i n
the south-east, there had been no outside invasion for a couple of
centuries. O n the other hand, we can picture a very empty land-
scape, where setdements were few, far between, poor and primitive.
Agricultural resources were i n many cases neglected or underex-
ploited. There were areas, too, notably i n the northern mountains
where the Basques and the Asturians lived, where the people were
totally independent of any form of royal control and where a primi-
tive mountain society vigorously resisted outside control. Such was
the land the Muslims invaded.
The Muslim invasion of Spain and Portugal was i n many ways the
logical and necessary extension of the conquest of North Africa.
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Before the coming of the Muslims the area of the modern states of
Libya, Tunisia, Algeria and Morocco was occupied by two groups,
the Byzantines and the Berbers. The Byzantines held a number of
strongholds on the coast, notably T r i p o l i and Carthage, which they
kept supplied by sea. When they reconquered the land from the
Vandals i n the reign of Justinian, they had established an elaborate
system of defences on the southern frontiers of the setded areas,
but these seem to have been abandoned by the mid-seventh cen-
tury when the Muslims began to attack. The remaining Byzantine
garrisons defended their coastal strongholds stubbornly and they
held out much longer than the garrisons i n Syria and Palestine had
done a generation before, but they could easily be bypassed by over-
land invaders and were only a real threat when allied to the Berber
tribes of the area.
The Berbers were the real power i n the land. They were, and still
are, the indigenous inhabitants of North Africa, with their own, u n -
written, language, quite distinct from either Latin or Arabic. Their
social structure was tribal and they seem to have owed their first
loyalties to their k i n . Apart from this, there were wide variations
of lifestyle. Some Berbers were acculturated to the Byzantine world
and many were Christians. Others seem to have lived a much more
separate existence and some at least were still pagans. There were
Berbers who lived i n the cities, many more who lived as farmers i n
mountain villages, some who kept sheep and goats i n the steppe
lands and yet others who wandered as the Touareg do today i n the
remote and awesome wastes of the Sahara. Berber genealogies are
much less fully recorded than Arabic ones and it is difficult to gauge
whether the scattered references we have reflect a static relationship
or whether some groups were expanding at the expense of others.
According to Arab sources, the Berber tribes were divided into
two groups, called Butr and Barnis, just as Arab tribes were divided
into Qays/Mudar and Yemen. Most of the Berbers who joined the
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who had entered into closer relations with the Byzantines and had
in many cases converted to Christianity. This suggests that the Mus
lims assumed the leadership and gave extra momentum to an exist
ing movement of populations among the Berbers, and this goes
some way to explaining the success and completeness of their con
quests. In practice, the difference between Butr and Barnis seems
to have had little effect on the politics of al-Andalus, unlike the mur
derous disputes between Qays/Mudar and Yemen among the Arabs,
and divisions among the Berber tribes were based on smaller units
of individual tribes and extended families and their relationship
to Arab groups.
The conquest of North Africa had begun as early as 22/642 4
political disputes among the Muslims but more because of the vig
orous resistance put up both by the Berber tribes of the interior
and the garrisons of Byzantine cities like T r i p o l i and Carthage o n
the coast. More than the other Arab commanders, ' U q b a seems to
have understood that the key to subduing N o r t h Africa was to enrol
the support of Berber tribes. In 50/670 he founded the Muslim
setdement of Qayrawn, away from the coast, i n the central plain
of Tunisia. Like earlier Arab garrison cities at Kfa, Basra and Fustt,
this was designed to be a setdement where the Muslims could pre
serve their identity and from which they could dominate the sur
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rounding country.
In 681 ' U q b a led a spectacular raid to the west i n which he
reached Tangier and the Adantic coast, although there were no
Muslim setdements beyond modern Tunisia at this stage. This
was his last and greatest achievement, but his memory lingered o n
and his sons continued to play a very important role i n the Muslim
politics of North Africa. There followed a period when the Arabs
were almost driven out and Qayrawn itself fell to the Berber leader
Kusayla. The Muslims d i d not recover the initiative until 74/694
when the Caliph ' A b d al-Malik sent an army of Syrians led by Hassn
b. al-Nu'mn al-Ghassn. H e captured the last Byzantine outpost
at Carthage and defeated the Berber leader, the priestess Khina,
and i n 82/701 established himself firmly i n Qayrawn. H e was able
to do this, not only because of his Syrian troops, but because of his
policy of working with the Berbers. Some tribes, like the Luwta,
seem to have remained allies of the Arabs throughout; many others
came over after the defeat of Khina, including her own sons. They
converted to Islam and were enrolled i n the Muslim diwn, receiv
ing a share of the spoils like the Arabs.
Hassn was dismissed by the governor of Egypt, who super
vised the western provinces i n 704, probably because he was too
successful, and was replaced by Ms b. Nusayr, a man of obscure
origins who had risen i n the financial administration of the Umayyad
empire. H e continued Hassn's policy of recruiting converted
Berbers into the Muslim armies and using this new force to extend
his control further to the west until, i n about 90/708, he took
Tangier and appointed a Berber supporter of his, Triq b. Ziyd,
as governor.
The conquest of North Africa had been achieved by an alliance
of Arabs and Berbers i n the name of Islam. As the conquest pro
ceeded, so the importance of the Berber contribution increased.
By the time the Muslims were conquering the area of modern
6 Muslim Spain and Portugal
are not annals and are more concerned with vivid and interesting
stories than the careful ordering of events. The Akhbris particularly
important for the preUmayyad period, while Ibn alQtiya gives
vivid and gossipy accounts of the courts of the Umayyad amirs.
In the tenth century these accounts were edited and system
atised using the criteria of annalistic historiography developed i n
the eastern Islamic world by such authorities as alMad'in (d. 839)
and alTabar(d. 923). In alAndalus this editing seems to have
been the work of the Rz family, originally from Rayy i n central
Iran, who had come to alAndalus as merchants i n the late ninth
century. According to his son Is (d. 989), it was A h m a d b. Ms
alRz (d. 955) who took the akhbr which people i n alAndalus
had not previously been very interested i n and ordered them
(daxvwana) according to the rules of historical science. The writ 8
ings of the Rzs, father and son, have largely been lost but they
were used, and often incorporated entirely, with acknowledge
ments, by the great eleventhcentury compiler Ibn Hayyn (d. 1076).
M u c h of Ibn Hayyan's work has i n turn been lost, including the
sections which dealt with the conquests and the early amirs. Some
of his material has, however, been preserved i n shorter works, like
the anonymous Fath alAndalus of c. 1100, and later abbreviated9
The fact that the sources as they have reached us were written
down at least two centuries after the events has meant that fierce
worthless. 12
There may also have been more hard-headed reasons for being
economical with the truth. The nature of the conquest affected
the status of the lands conquered: if they were conquered by
force ('anwatan) they became the property of the conquerors, the
indivisible f a y (immovable booty) of the Muslims, and the pro
'
ceeds from these properties were to be used for the benefit of the
Muslims as their ruler saw fit. If the lands were taken peacefully
(sulhan), on the other hand, they continued to be the absolute
property of the inhabitants and would only pass into Muslim hands
by inheritance, purchase or conversion of the owner, i n which
case they would be the absolute property of their Muslim owners.
There is some evidence of two historiographical traditions within
the accounts of the conquests. The first, reported by the Rzs and
14
were divisions i n the Visigothic ranks and that the brothers of Witiza
at least hoped that the Muslims would defeat Roderick and then
depart, leaving them to assume the crown they felt was rightly theirs.
Whatever the reasons, the Visigothic army suffered a shattering de
feat, Roderick was missing, presumed dead, and members of the
army scattered throughout Iberia, spreading defeatist sentiment. 19
in its final years than ever before: the damaging religious division
between A r i a n Visigoths and their Orthodox subjects had been
laid to rest for more than a century and there is by the end of the
seventh century no real sign of a split between Roman and Visigothic
elements. The Jews certainly suffered severe legal disabilities and i n -
termittent persecution and it is clear that they preferred to remain
may well have been the same i n the case of Visigothic Spain. It was
not perhaps that numbers of the population i n general were lack
ing, but rather that numbers of military men were inadequate.
There seems to have been a sharp division i n Visigothic society
between military and non-military classes and there is no mention
of popular or civilian resistance. In Cordoba the Muslims were
informed by a shepherd they met that most of the people had fled
and that only the garrison of 400 and the du'af remained. Du'af
is an Arabic word which refers to the non-arms-bearing part of the
population; it was clearly considered out of the question that such
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In the event Spain proved too attractive to its conquerors and they
did not leave but chose to setde i n the new lands. In the eastern
Islamic world it had been the intention that the Muslims should
setde only i n certain garrison towns, like Kfa and Basra i n Iraq,
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Fustt (Old Cairo) i n Egypt and Qayrawn i n Ifrqya, and that they
should live off the taxes of the land. N o effort seems to have been
made to develop such a system i n Spain, and Muslim setdement
seems to have been haphazard and determined by the interests of
the setders rather than any overall scheme. The conquerors setded
down as property owners and do not seem to have received the 'at ',
or pensions, which were such an important feature of early Muslim
society i n the Middle East. This i n turn meant that there was no
need for the elaborate and precocious bureaucracy which had grown
up to service the system, nor any need to compile dwns or lists of
those entided to pensions. The slow development of bureaucracy
in al-Andalus may i n turn have been a reason for the slow develop
ment of a literary culture: not until the time of A b d al-Rahmn II
(822-52) did administration and a native literary culture begin to
appear.
Cordoba became the capital shordy after the initial conquest and
remained crucial to the politics of the period. Control of the capital
was vital for anyone who sought to govern the country and no
serious attempt was made to shift the capital elsewhere. The reasons
for this are not clear at first. It was not the Roman or Byzantine cap
ital and had litde obvious strategic importance. It was, however, at
the hinge of a number of important routes. To the north the roads
ran through the passes of the Sierra Morena to Calatrava, Toledo
and eventually to the Ebro valley. T o the east the upper Guadal
quivir valley gave access to the Levante, while south and west Elvira
(Granada) and Seville were easily accessible. The geography of al-
Andalus always made communications a problem, but Cordoba was
probably the least inconvenient site for the centre of government.
Perhaps more important was the rich agricultural hinterland of
the city and the fact that this was densely setded by the Muslims.
These resources of supplies and men were often able to sustain
the rulers when, i n the reign of the A m i r ' A b d Allh (888-912) for
The Conquest and the Age of the Amirs, 711-56 17
erty. They may also have been concerned that he was encouraging
new setders from North Africa and the Middle East who would
demand a share of the wealth of the country. The struggle of the
early arrivals to maintain their privileged status i n the face of chal
lenges from later immigrants was to be a major source of unrest i n
the period of the governors. After 'Abd al-Azz no governor died
30
a violent death before 741 except at the hands of the infidel, and
there were no rebellions of importance.
Muslim Spain was only loosely attached to the main body of
the caliphate, but, given the vast distances involved, it is impress
ive to see how much influence the Umayyad caliphs i n Damascus
could exert on this, the newest and most distant of their provinces.
Governors were i n general appointed by the governor of Ifrqya
in Qayrawn or sometimes, as i n the case of al-Samh b. Mlik al-
Khawln, by the Caliph i n person, and they were almost always
outsiders to the province with no local power base or following.
This did not always mean that the wishes of the local people were
ignored and the Akhbr al-Majm'a states, perhaps with exaggerated
local patriotism, that if they d i d not like a governor or if he at
tempted to undermine their autonomy and privileged fiscal status,
they would write to the Caliph who would send one who pleased
them. Sometimes, if the governor was killed, the settlers would
31
settlers.
In 718 the reforming Caliph 'Umar II (717-20) appointed al-
Samh b. Mlik al-Khawln as governor to implement the fiscal
reforms he had been introducing throughout the caliphate. The 32
liable to pay the ' u s h r or tithe on this land. The newcomers were
accommodated by dividing the caliphal fifth among them i n terri
torial concessions ( i q t d ' a t ) . For the first time the land was assessed
for taxation, with the intention that the surplus should be sent
to Damascus, as happened i n other provinces of the caliphate. In
the case of al-Andalus, al-Samh was allowed to use such revenue
as remained after the payment of salaries and the expenses of the
Holy War for the rebuilding of the bridge and city wall i n Cordoba.
In short, there is no unequivocal evidence that the caliphs received
anything beyond gifts at the time of conquest from al-Andalus or
that any financial strings bound the province to the central govern
ment. After the death of the Caliph i n 720 and al-Samh i n 721,
these centralising measures seem to have been allowed to lapse.
32. I have followed the discussion of al-Samh's governorate i n Chalmeta, I n v a s i o i
e I s l a m i z a c i o n , pp. 259-68; see also Manzano, 'Arabes, berberes e indigenas', p. 21
33. Akhbr a l - M a j m ' a , pp. 2 3 - 4 .
The Conquest and the Age of the Amirs. 711-56 21
The governors also issued coins from the earliest times i n order
to facilitate the distribution of booty and then the payment of taxes.
The first of these date from immediately after the first conquests,
711-12. Though they bear Latin inscriptions, such as the Islamic
34
In the north these exiles j o i n e d forces with the local people, always
resistant to any central government. Together they opposed the Mus
lims i n the difficult and inaccessible mountain areas of the north
ern flanks of the Picos de Europa. Here they seem to have elected
Pelayo as king and been victorious i n a small encounter known to
history as the batde of Covadonga and traditionally dated to 717.
The reports of the Arab historians do not mention this trifling set
back, but for later Christian sources the batde of Covadonga marks
the first stage i n the long struggle to expel the Muslims from Spain
and has acquired a legendary importance.
At the time the Muslims were much more concerned to invade
France, which offered prospects of booty wholly lacking i n the inhos
pitable valleys of the Cantabrian mountains. Details are sketchy, but
there were at least four expeditions, the first launched at the very
beginning of the conquests, the other three led by the governors
in person. In 721 al-Samh b. Mlik al-Khawln led an expedition
against Toulouse on which he himself was killed, and i n the sum
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of the Egyptians.
The military expedition against the Berbers was led by a Qays
commander, Kulthm b. 'Iyd, with his nephew Balj b. Bishr al
Qushayras secondincommand. It was not a success: i n Septem
ber/October 741 the Muslim army was defeated on the River Sebou
in northern Morocco and the survivors, about 10,000 strong, now
led by Balj b. Bishr, fled north to Ceuta. Here, completely cut off
from their homeland, ragged and starving, they were i n desperate
straits. In vain they appealed to the governor of alAndalus, Ibn
Qatan, for help, but he refused.
Meanwhile, the Berber uprising i n North Africa had resulted
in a similar upheaval i n alAndalus. There had been rumblings
of discontent i n the peninsula before. According to the Chronicle
of 754, a Berber (the Chronicle distinguishes the Berbers (Mauri)
from Arabs (Saraceni)) called Munuz, hearing that his fellow Ber
bers i n North Africa were being oppressed by the Arabs, raised a
rebellion i n the northern frontiers of alAndalus, possibly trying to
establish an independent lordship i n Cerdaiia. This was probably
in 729. The next year Munuz made an alliance with Eudo, Duke
of Aquitaine, but i n 731 the governor, ' A b d alRahmn alGhfiq,
launched an expedition against h i m and he was finally surrounded
in Cerdaa and was obliged to commit suicide i n order to evade
capture. 37
37. T h e only source which mentions this is the C h r o n i c l e o f 754, cap. 79: for the
chronology see Chalmeta, I n v a s i o n e I s l a m i z a c i o n , pp. 2823.
The Conquest and the Age of the Amirs, 711-56 25
The next year (743), a new governor was sent from Qayrawn
by Hanzala b. Safwn, apparentiy i n response to a petition from
Andalusis of all parties who wanted peace. Ab'l-Khattar al-Husm
b. Dirr al-Kalb was a member of the Yemeni aristocracy of Damas
cus (Kalb were one of the leading Yemenite tribes of Syria) and he
attempted to solve the outstanding problems of the province. H e
first secured the release of all the Arab and Berber captives and
then set about providing for the Syrians who now clearly had to
be accommodated i n al-Andalus.
Ab'1-Khattr, perhaps on the advice of Count Ardabast, settled
the Syrians i n a methodical way. They were already organised
in junds and each j u n d was setded i n a different area, chosen,
allegedly, because it resembled their Syrian homeland. Thus the
j u n d of Damascus was settled at Elvira (Granada), the j u n d of
Jordan i n Rayyu (Malaga and Archidona), the j u n d of Palestine
in Sidonia, the j u n d of Hims i n Seville and Niebla, the j u n d of
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the Berbers and could hope for support from some Berber groups.
These assets recommended this otherwise rather undistinguished
old gendeman to al-Sumayl and were also to mean that the Fihrs
were to be the only serious rivals to the Umayyads for control of the
whole of al-Andalus.
Ysuf began to exercise his power as his patron would have
expected, excluding Yemenis from the fruits of office. In 747 Ysuf 40
attack at Secunda, on the south bank of the river opposite the city
of Cordoba. Ysuf began to grow i n confidence. The collapse of the
Umayyad caliphate of Damascus i n 747-50 i n the face of 'Abbasid
attacks from the east meant that he became an independent ruler.
H e felt strong enough to remove al-Sumayl to Zaragoza where he
occupied himself helping victims of the terrible famine of the early
750s. But the old enmities were merely dormant. In 755 al-Sumayl
was besieged i n Zaragoza by Yemeni elements, Yusuf was powerless
to help h i m and he was only saved by an expedition of Qaysvolun
teers from the south. It was into this environment of deadly fac
tional conflict that the emissaries of ' A b d al-Rahmn b. Mu'wiya,
the Umayyad, arrived.
During this period of instability, the northern frontier of al-
Andalus stabilised. In the immediate aftermath of the conquest
41
the Muslims penetrated as far as the north coast, leaving only a few
upland valleys i n the Pyrenees and isolated pockets of resistance on
the northern slopes of the Picos de Europa; the sources even speak
of a Muslim 'governor' i n Gijon. Most of the plains of the Duero
and the mountains of Galicia and Cantabria were occupied, i n so
far as there was a Muslim presence at all, by groups of Berbers, but
we know very litde about this and there is no record of permanent
or significant occupation i n these areas; nor were there any major
campaigns, the Arabs finding France much more rewarding terri
tory. Almost by default, the areas north of the Duero slipped out
of Muslim hands after the Berber rebellion of 741 caused many of
them to come south where they were heavily defeated i n batde. A
long famine which began i n 750 seems to have caused many of the
survivors to leave for North Africa. The Christian King Alfonso I
(739-57) was able to establish some fortified outposts i n the Duero
plains and to raid even further south. The Cordillera Central marked
40. Ysuf's governorate is described i n Chalmeta, I n v a s i o n e Islamizacion, pp. 335-48.
41. F o r the historical geography of the frontier regions see Manzano Moreno,
Frontera.
The Conquest and the Age of the Amirs, 711-56 29
Islam, the Umayyad chief Ab Sufyn had been one of the lead
ing opponents of the new religion, but, following the triumph of
Muhammad after 628, Ab Sufyan's son Mu'wiya rapidly became
one of the most important figures i n the early Muslim state. After
the conquest of Syria he was appointed governor and, i n 661, with
the assassination of Muhammad's cousin and son-in-law, 'Al, he be
came Caliph of the entire Muslim world (661-80). Mu'wiya's direct
line died out with his son Yazd i n 684. After a vigorous civil war be
tween the supporters of the Umayyads and their enemies, the caliph
ate was seized by Mu'wiya's second cousin Marwn b. al-Hakam
(684-85) and his son 'Abd al-Malik (685-705), so inaugurating a
second Umayyad dynasty, sometimes known as the Marwanids.
For half a century, the Umayyads ruled the whole of the Islamic
world from Sind and Samarqand i n the east to newly conquered
al-Andalus i n the west, but there was always opposition from those
1. Secondary sources for the early Umayyad amirate are very limited. F o r the
reign o f ' A b d al-Rahmn I we have the final chapter o f P. Chalmeta, I n v a s i o n
e I s l a m i z a c i o n : l a s u m i s i o n de H i s p a n i a y l a f o r m a c i o n de a l - A n d a l u s (Madrid, 1994),
pp. 349-87. Thereafter, the fundamental account remains E . Lvi-Provencal, H E M ,
i, pp. 139-278. E . M a n z a n o M o r e n o , L a F r o n t e r a de A l - A n d a l u s en epoca de los Omeyas
(Madrid, 1991) is invaluable, not just for the study o f the frontier zones but for
wider questions o f the political structure o f the amirate.
2. F o r the role o f the Umayyads i n the eastern Islamic world, H . Kennedy, T h e
P r o p h e t a n d the A g e of the C a l i p h a t e s ( L o n d o n , 1986), pp. 82-123, a n d G.R. Hawting,
T h e F i r s t D y n a s t y of I s l a m ( L o n d o n , 1986).
30
The Umayyad Amirate, 756852 31
who felt that the hereditary monarchy of a family who had been
among Muhammad's leading enemies was unlslamic and those who
resented the domination of the Muslim world by the Syrian mili
tary supporters of the dynasty. From 747 to 750 there was a vast
upheaval, the 'Abbasid revolution, which swept the Umayyads and
their Syrian supporters from power. Most of the members of the
ruling house were rounded up and executed, but a few, mosdy less
prominent, individuals were able to lie low and make their escape.
One such was ' A b d alRahmn b. Mu'wiya, a young grandson of
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support among the Berbers and were the only family who could
rival the Umayyads; they were not to give up easily. It was seven
years before ' A b d al-Rahmn felt strong enough to challenge their
hold on Toledo. In 764 he sent two of his most trusted commanders,
Badr and Tammm b. 'Alqama, against the city where Hishm b.
'Urwa al-Fihri was holding out and he was captured and executed.
There were at least two other attempts by Fihris to establish them
selves i n the peninsula. The first of these came i n 778-79 when
'Abd al-Rahmn b. Habb al-Fihri, known as the Slav from his blond
complexion and blue eyes, landed i n the east of the country and
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east with a merchant who left it one night with a note attached i n
the markets of Qayrawan, the nearest 'Abbasid outpost (in Tunisia,
other accounts say it was taken to Medina and left outside the
caliphal tent). When al-Mansr was informed he is said to have
remarked, 'We all belong to G o d . We sent this miserable man to
his death. Praise be to G o d who has put the sea between me and
this devil!' It hardly needs to be said that this imaginative story
appears only i n Andalusi histories and finds no place i n 'Abbasid
6
before being killed by the Amir. In the same year he had another
leader from the area, Ab'1-Sabbh Yahya al-Yahsub, executed i n
Cordoba. The dead man's followers sought revenge and the people
of Seville joined his cousins i n an attempt to take Cordoba by sur
prise. It was not until 774 that the rebellion was finally defeated by
'Abd al-Malik b. 'Umar. This seems to have completed the defeat of
the j u n d i leaders i n this area and their subjection to effective con
trol from Cordoba. 8
the eastern Islamic world, the members of the house of 'Al, first
cousin to the Prophet and husband of his daughter Ftima, were
the most powerful focus of opposition to both Umayyad and 'Abbasid
caliphates. Most of their following, however, came from Iraq and
points east and they had litde support among the Syrians who formed
the majority of the Arab setders i n al-Andalus. Heterodox religious
opinions were more widespread among the Berbers, however. In
North Africa at this time, these opinions usually took the form of
Kharijism, but i n 768 and 770 a Berber of the tribe of Miknsa
called Shaqyb. 'Abd al-Whid led a revolt, claiming to be related
to the 'Alids. His rebellion began i n Santaver, i n the hills around
9
Cuenca, but for the next nine years he dominated much of the
sparsely inhabited upland country between Santaver and Coria and
Medellin far to the west. It was a guerrilla war, the Berbers retreat
ing to the mountains on approach of the Amir's army and return
ing to the villages and plains when they had gone. The rebellion
was an irritant, but the soi-disant Fatimid seems to have attracted
no support amongst the Arabs or the town dwellers and 'Abd al-
Rahmn was also able to make an alliance with Hill al-Madyn,
described as head ( r a s ) of the Berbers i n the east of al-Andalus.
In the end, i n 776-77, Shaqya was taken by treachery and killed.
Although he clearly commanded support among the Berbers,
there is litde evidence that this, or indeed any other of the Berber
disturbances of the time, were motivated by Berber resentment
against Arab control. 'Abd al-Rahmn had Berber supporters and
Berber opponents just as he had Arab supporters and Arab oppon
ents; the real distinction was between those who threw i n their lot
with Cordoba and those who were determined to maintain their
own local independence.
It only took six days for Hishm to come from Merida, and 'Abd
Allh greeted h i m as ruler and handed over the seal of office,
but his other brother was not prepared to accept this verdict
and gathered his supporters to march south. There was a short,
sharp conflict near Jaen and Sulayman's men were defeated. It
took almost two months for Hishm to reduce Toledo and oblige his
brother to surrender, but i n 789 Sulayman was paid 60,000 dinrs
in cash, possibly half the annual income of the amirate at this time,
and was forced to leave for N o r t h Africa and promise not to return:
Umayyads might be defeated and disgraced but, at this time, they
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would not be executed like any common rebel, for that would under
mine the status of the whole ruling house. 13
As far as we can tell, the new amir faced litde internal opposition
after the defeat of his brothers. H e had indirect dealings with the
magnates of the Ebro valley. In 788/9 Sa'id b. al-Husayn al-Ansr,
whose father had held Zaragoza against the Umayyads i n the pre
vious reign, took the city again, proclaiming himself A m i r . H e was
soon defeated, not by Umayyad troops but by Ms b. Fortun b.
Qasi, whose grandfather had been Count of the area i n Visigothic
times and one of the earliest and most distinguished converts
to Islam. In 791/2 Zaragoza was taken over by Matrh, the son
14
'Amrs at this time, allied with the Umayyads against the leading
Arab families of the area, marks the beginning of the entry of the
muwallads into the political life of al-Andalus.
The Arab chroniclers give Hishm a pious and ascetic personality
who were familiar with the doctrines, notably, i n the first genera
tion, Yahya b. Yahya al-Layth (d. 848), a pupil of Malik himself,
who by his advice effectively controlled the appointment and dis
missal of the qddts of Cordoba. The adoption of the Malikite school
so completely meant that al-Andalus was spared the sort of sectar
ian dissensions which tore Baghdad society apart i n the third/tenth
and early fourth/eleventh centuries. Malikism was hostile alike to
Kharijism, Shi'ism and even to the more innocent forms of Sufism,
and none of them really secured widespread support i n al-Andalus.
O n the debit side, however, Malikism offered a rather formal and
rigorist version of Islam, more concerned with correct performance
than inspiration, and it discouraged speculation and discussion: if
Cordoba was spared the conflicts that convulsed Baghdad, it also
saw none of the intellectual excitement that accompanied them.
Hishm died on 17 A p r i l 796. H e was careful to leave no uncer
tainty about the identity of his chosen successor and his son al-
Hakam, now 26 years old, was duly accepted as A m i r i n Cordoba.
The sources portray h i m as a very different character from his
father. T a l l , thin, haughty and strikingly dark i n complexion,
the new prince was to prove a formidable ruler. H e was fond of
women and wine, too much so some said, and was no mean poet,
but he was remembered more for his cunning, his implacable ruth-
lessness and the awesome speed with which he reacted to news of
disaffection.
And disaffection d i d not take long to become apparent. His
father had been opposed by his two brothers, Sulayman and 'Abd
Allh. Both these were still alive, i n exile i n North Africa, and they
were now determined to regain their lost inheritance. The turbu
lent Sulayman spent the next four years wandering the country,
attempting to build up enough support, largely among the Berbers
of the south, to dislodge his nephew. H e was defeated i n a number
of encounters and was finally surrendered to al-Hakam by the Berber
42 Muslim Spain and Portugal
shocked by the Amir's severity. His action alienated many who had
not been actively involved i n the coup attempt. For thirteen years
discontent rumbled on and the A m i r fortified himself i n the city
and became more and more dependent on his guards. T h e n i n 818
opposition erupted again i n a spectacular manner. There was a
widespread uprising i n the populous suburb, usually referred to
simply as al-Rabad (the suburb), which lay to the south of the city
itself, across the Guadalquivir river. The uprising attracted support
from such respectable figures as the jurist Yahya b. Yahya al-Layth
as well as the populace i n general (called the 'dmma or the sawdd'
in the Arabic sources). The causes of the discontent are disputed.
According to some sources there were complaints about taxation
and especially the raising of 'unQuranic' taxes (maghdrim or wazd'if)
to supplement the 'legitimate' tax base of the Umayyad amirs which
was very limited. Al-Hakam is said to have been the first ruler of
al-Andalus to acquire mamlk (slave) soldiers, and recruiting and
maintaining the sort of full-time guard al-Hakam built up would
certainly have required additional sources of income. The com
bination of resentments among the Cordovans at being excluded
from power and paying more taxes brought together a broad cross-
section of the population to oppose the Amir.
If the cause of the rebellion is unclear, the results are not: the
insurgents attempted to cross the bridge and storm the city proper
but they were beaten off by loyal troops, led by the hdjib (chief
minister), 'Abd al-Karm b. Mughth, while two members of the
ruling family with military experience, 'Ubayd Allh b. 'Abd Allh
al-Balans and Ishaq b. al-Mundhir, led troops out of a side gate to
attack the rebels from the rear. Their defeat was total and the
vengeance of the A m i r was terrible. After an initial slaughter, he
ordered that the suburb south of the river be destroyed and its
inhabitants driven into exile. Only a few, like the jurist Yahya b.
Yahya al-Layth, went into hiding and were later pardoned. The
most important consequence of this diaspora was that many of
the refugees went to Morocco where they setded i n Fes on the
opposite bank of the river from the existing colony of immigrants
from Qayrawan. In this way the twin setdements which still form
the core of the ancient city of Fes, the quarter of the Qarawiym
and the quarter of the Andalusiym, came into existence.
The events i n Cordoba overshadowed the last years of al-Hakam's
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Arabic sources
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316
Bibliography 317