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 Historical Arabia

  (This is taken from F.F. Arbuthnot's Arabic Authors, originally published in 1890.)

Arabia

The Arabia of to-day is bounded on the west by the Red Sea and Gulf of Suez; on the south by the Gulf of Aden and the Arabian Sea; on the east by the Gulf of Oman and the Persian Gulf; and on the north by a portion of Syria. This last boundary would, however, be more clearly defined by drawing a line from Suez straight across to the western head of the Persian Gulf. By the Greeks and Romans this country was divided into Arabia Petræa, Arabia Deserta, and Arabia Felix, or the Stony, the Desert, and the Happy. The Arabs themselves call it ‘The Land of the Arabs,’ while modern geographers give the Sinaitic peninsula as the first geographic district; the Hijaz, including the Haram, or sacred territory of Mecca, as the second; and Yaman, with the Tehamah, as the third. To these may be added the provinces of Hadramant and Mahrah, and of Oman and Hasa, to the south and east respectively, with Nejd, or Central Arabia, as the central plateau, and some large deserts scattered in different parts of the peninsula.

 

Of the revenues of Arabia it is almost impossible to form anything like a correct estimate. The area of the country covers about 1,200,000 square miles, and the population is said to be from five to six millions, of whom one-fifth consist of Ahl Bedoo, or dwellers in the open land, otherwise known as Bedouins; and four-fifths of settled Arabs, called Ahl Hadr, or dwellers in fixed localities. The history of Arabia may be divided into three periods:

1st. The prehistoric period, full of tales of heroes, and giants, and wonderful cities.

2nd. The period which preceded the era of Muhammad.

3rd. That which followed it.

 

The first period is mythical to a certain extent; at all events, nothing can be stated positively about it. The second period is distinguished as one of local monarchies and federal governments in a rough and rude form; while the third commences with theocratic centralization, dissolving finally into general anarchy. Of the many tribes in Arabia, the most celebrated is the family of the Koraish, still regarded as the noblest of the Arabs, partly because, at the beginning of the fifth century A.D., their chiefs had rendered themselves the masters and acknowledged guardians of the sacred Kaabah at Mecca, and partly because of their connection with the Prophet. The Kaabah, La Maison Carrée, or square temple, a shrine of unknown antiquity, was situated within the precincts of the town of Mecca, and to it, long before Muhammad’s time, the Arabs had brought yearly offerings, and made devout pilgrimages. The tribe of Koraish, having once obtained the keys of the consecrated building, had held them against all comers till Muhammad’s conquest of Mecca in A.D. 630, when he handed over the key to Othman bin Talha, the former custodian, to be kept by him and his posterity as an hereditary and perpetual office, and he further confirmed his uncle Abbas in the office of giving drink to the pilgrims.

 

Before entering into a somewhat lengthy description of Arabian literature, it is necessary to give a short and rapid sketch of Arabian history, beginning from the time of Muhammad, as his Koran was the foundation of the literary edifice. All Arab authors have looked upon that work as the height of eloquent diction, and have regarded it as the model standard to be followed in all their productions. Leaving, then, the two first periods of Arabian history, viz., the prehistoric, and the pre-Muhammadan, without any particular notice, the third period will be sketched as briefly as possible, and will be found excessively interesting, containing as it does the rise, grandeur, and decline of the Arabs as a nation.

 

Muhammad, on his death in June, A.D. 632, left the entire Arab peninsula, with two or three exceptions, under one sceptre and one creed. He was succeeded by Abu Bakr (the father of Ayesha, the favourite wife of the prophet), known as the Companion of the Cave, with the title of Khalifah, or successor. His reign only lasted two years, but during that period the various insurrections that broke out in Arabia in consequence of the death of the Prophet were promptly put down, after severe fighting, in various parts of the peninsula, and the whole country was subjugated. Foreign expeditions beyond the borders were also planned and started.

 

Abu Bakr, dying in August, A.D. 634, was succeeded by Umar, or Omar, the conqueror of Syria, Persia, and Egypt by means of his generals Khalid bin Walid (the best, perhaps, that Islam produced), Abu Obaida, Mothanna, Sád bin Malik, Amr bin al-Aasi, and others. Omar himself was an early convert of A.D. 615, and a sudden conversion like our Paul; but one made his converts by fanaticism and the sword, the other by preaching and the pen. After a glorious and victorious reign of ten years Omar was assassinated by a Persian slave in November, A.D. 644, and was followed as Khalif by Othman, son of Affan, of the noble family of Abd-esh-Shems, who also assumed the title ‘Amir al-Momenin, or Commander of the Faithful, which had been first adopted by his predecessor Omar. Othman ruled for twelve years, when he was murdered in A.D. 656, some say at the instigation of Ali, nephew of Muhammad, and husband of his only daughter Fatima. Anyhow, Ali succeeded Othman as Khalif, but was defeated by Moawia, Governor of Syria, and assassinated in A.D. 660.

 

Moawia bin Abu Sofyan then established the Benou Umayya dynasty, called by Europeans the Omaiyides, or Ommiades, from the name of Umayya, the father of the race. This dynasty reigned for nearly ninety years, and numbered fourteen successive princes, with their capital at Damascus.

 

During the reign of Yazid I., the second prince (A.D. 679-683), Hussain, the younger son of Ali the Khalif, came to an untimely end. His elder brother, Hasan, a man of quiet disposition, had been previously murdered by one of his wives, at the instigation, it is said, of Yazid before he came to the throne. This happened in A.D. 669. Later on Hussain, with his followers, rose in rebellion, and was killed on the plain of Kerbela, A.D. 680. The descendants, however, of this faction continued the disturbances which eventually brought about the great Muhammadan schism, and the splitting up of the religion into two sects, known to this day as the Sunnis and Shias. The adherents of the legitimate Khalifate, and of the orthodox doctrine, assumed the name of Sunnites, or Traditionists. These acknowledge the first four Khalifs (the rightly minded, or rightly directed, as they are called) to have been legitimate successors of Muhammad, while the sectaries of Ali are known as the Shiites, or Separatists. These last regard Ali as the first rightful Imam, for they prefer this title (found in Sura ii., verse 118, of the Koran) to that of Khalif. The Turks and Arabs are Sunnis: the Persians, and most of the Muhammadans of India, Shias. This division into two sects, who hate each other cordially, has done more to weaken the power of the Muhammadan religion as a power than anything else. The Shias to this day execrate the memory of Yazid as the murderer of their hero Hussain, whom they have ever regarded as a martyr, and given full vent to their feelings on the subject in their ‘Passion Play,’ translated by Sir Lewis Pelly, and described by Mr. Benjamin in his ‘Persia and the Persians.’

 

Other insurrections against the reigning Omaiyide Khalifs were also put down, portions of Asia, Africa and Spain conquered, and even France invaded, so that at the close of the Benou Umayya dynastry, about A.D. 750, their empire consisted of many and large territories in Europe, Africa and Asia. Their colour was white, as opposed to the black of the Abbasides, and the green of the Fatimites, as descendants of Muhammad.

 

But the Benou Umayya dynasty succumbed, A.D. 749, under the blows of Ibrahim (great-grandson of Abbas, the uncle of the Prophet), and of his younger brother, Abul Abbas, better known in history as As- affah, or the Blood-shedder. A decisive battle was fought on the banks of the river Zab, near Arbela, and Marwan II. (A.D. 744-750), the last of the Omaiyide Khalifs, was defeated, and fled first to Damascus, and then to Egypt, where he was eventually killed by his pursuers, A.D. 750. The history of the reign of the Abbasides now begins, and under them the power and glory of Islam reached their highest point. But it is first necessary to allude to the conquest of Spain by the Omaiyides, a branch of which family still retained for a long time in the West the power which they had totally lost in the East.

 

The most important achievement of the reign of Walid I. (A.D. 705-715), the sixth prince of the Omaiyide dynasty, was the conquest of Spain by his generals Tarik and Musa. The Arabs (known in Europe under the name of Saracens) first established themselves in Cordova about A.D. 711, and the two generals above named continued their victorious progress throughout the country in 712 and 713, until nearly nine-tenths of the peninsula was held by the Muhammadans. Some years later France even was invaded by the Arabs, and the banners of the Muslims were erected on the coasts of the Gulf of Lyons, on the walls of Narbonne, of Nimes, of Carcassonne, and of Béziers. The Arabs afterwards advanced as far as the plains of Tours, where their victorious progress was checked by Charles Martel, who gained a great victory over them near that town in October, A.D. 732, and completely defeated them, so that they were obliged to retire again to Spain. There successive viceroys and emirs ruled as the representatives of the Khalifs at Damascus until the fall of the Omaiyide dynasty in the East, A.D. 750.

 

But even after that Spain remained for many years under Arab

domination. Anarchy almost prevailed from A.D. 750 to 755, but in that

year the Arabs of Spain, weary of disorder, elected as their ruler

Abd-ar-Rahman, grandson of the Khalif Hashim, tenth prince of the

Omaiyide dynasty. At the time of his election, Abd-ar-Rahman was a

wanderer in the desert, pursued by his enemies, when a deputation from

Andalusia sought him out and offered him the Khalifate of Spain. It

was gladly accepted. He landed there in September, A.D. 755, was

universally welcomed, and founded at Cordova the Western Omaiyide

Khalifate, which lasted up to A.D. 1031, under sixteen rulers, with

certain interruptions during the reign of the last seven of them. On

the extinction of the Khalifate, Spain was broken up into various

petty kingdoms under kings and kinglets belonging to different Arab

tribes and families. This continued from A.D. 1032 to 1092, when the

Almoravides established themselves from A.D. 1092 to 1147, and were

followed by the Almohades, who reigned up to A.D. 1232.

 

After this Cordova, Seville, and other places were taken by Ferdinand

III. of Leon and Castile, between A.D. 1236 and 1248. On the fall of

Cordova the Muhammadan power declined with great rapidity; and, though

the celebrated kingdom of Granada was established by the Moors in A.D.

1232, it was their last refuge from the rising power of the

Christians. Some twenty-one princes reigned there till A.D. 1492, when

Granada itself was taken, and this last Muhammadan dynasty was driven

out of Spain by Ferdinand of Arragon and Isabella of Castile. Thus

ended the empire of the Arabs and the Moors in Spain, which had lasted

nearly eight hundred years.

 

The Spanish Arabs were extremely fond of learning. Indeed, it is due

to them to a very great extent that literature and science were kept

afloat in Europe during the ages that followed the invasion of the

Barbarians, as the Huns, Vandals, Goths, and Visigoths were generally

called. That interval known as the ‘Dark Ages’ was kept alight by the

Arabs alone. Abd-ar-Rahman II. established a library at Cordova during

his reign, A.D. 822-852. Hakim II., the successor of Abd-ar-Rahman

III., loved the sciences, founded the University of Cordova, and

collected a library of great magnitude (A.D. 961-976).

 

The revival of learning in Europe is chiefly attributed to the

writings of Arabian doctors and philosophers, and to the schools which

they founded in several parts of Spain and Italy. These seats of

learning were frequented even in the twelfth century of our era by

students from various parts of Europe, who disseminated the knowledge

thus acquired when they returned to their own countries. At that time

many Arabic works were translated into Latin, which thus facilitated

the progress of science. In the three last chapters of the second book

of the ‘History of the Muhammadan Dynasties in Spain,’ translated by

Pascual de Gayangos, the state of science and literature is detailed

in the words of Makkari, the original Arab author of that work, and in

it many once celebrated authors are mentioned, of whom not only their

productions, but even their very names, have since perished. The

distinguished writers whose works have come down to us will be more

particularly alluded to in the next chapter. Europe is also indebted

to the Arabs for the elements of many useful sciences, particularly

that of chemistry. Paper was first made in Europe by them, and their

carpets and manufactures in steel and leather were long unrivalled,

while in the Arabian schools of Cordova mathematics, astronomy,

philosophy, botany and medicine were taught with great success.

As Europe gradually emerged from darkness and ignorance, the Moors in

Spain became so weak and powerless that in A.D. 1526 Charles I of

Spain, and V. of Germany, ordered them to adopt the Spanish language.

 

In A.D. 1566 an edict of Philip II. forbade them to speak or write in

Arabic, and directed them to renounce all their traditional habits,

customs and ceremonies. Philip III. completed the work which his

father had left unfinished. In A.D. 1609 all the Moriscoes were

ordered to depart from the peninsula within three days, with a penalty

of death if they failed to obey the order, and from that time their

existence as a nation finally ceased in Europe, and Spain thus lost a

million of industrious inhabitants skilled in the useful arts. After

their expulsion Arabic literature more or less disappeared. Much of it

was destroyed, and a Spanish cardinal, it is said, once boasted that

he had destroyed with his own hands one hundred thousand Arabic

manuscripts! It is highly probable that the remnants of Andalusian

libraries were brought to light by Casiri (b. 1710, d. 1791) during

the past, and by Gayangos during the present century, and it is

doubtful if much more will ever now be discovered.

 

There are two buildings still extant in Spain which have survived the

Arabs, viz., their mosque at Cordova (now the Cathedral), and their

palace of the Alhambra at Granada, both well worth a visit, and well

described in Murray’s and O’Shea’s guides to Spain. During the reign

of Abd-ar-Rahman III. (A.D. 912-961) the city, palace, and gardens of

Medinatu-z-Ahra, three or four miles from Cordova, were constructed in

honour of his favourite wife or mistress, Az-zahra, and cost an

immense sum of money. At present no vestiges of them exist, and it is

supposed that not only these, but many other Arab mosques and

buildings, were intentionally destroyed by their conquerors, as the

hatred between the Christian and the Muslim in those days was of the

bitterest description.

 

And now to return to the Abbasides, established in the East on the

downfall of the Omaiyide dynasty there in A.D. 750, and thus continue

the main line of Arab history.

 

There were, in all, thirty-seven Abbaside Khalifs, of whom Abu Jaafar,

surnamed Al-Mansur, the Victorious (A.D. 754-775), Harun-ar-Rashid

(A.D. 786-809), and Al-Mamun (A.D. 812-833) were the most celebrated.

Of these, the first, who was the second Khalif, founded Baghdad, the

capital of the Abbasides, about A.D. 762; the second, who was the

fifth Khalif, has been rendered immortal by the frequent illusions to

him, and to members of the Barmeki family, in the ‘Arabian Nights’;

while the third, who was the seventh Khalif, was a great patron of

literature and science.

 

As years rolled on the dynasty and its princes became weaker and

weaker, and finally came to an end under the thirty-seventh and last

Khalif Al-Mustaa ‘sim Billah, with the capture of Baghdad in A.D. 1258

by Halaku Khan, the sovereign of the Mughals, and the grandson of

Jenghiz Khan.

 

Long before this, however, the empire which the first of the Abbasides

had conquered was already broken up. About A.D. 879, in Persia,

Amr-bin-Lais founded the Suffary or Braiser dynasty, still subject to

the Commander of the Faithful. But even this allegiance only lasted

till A.D. 901, when the Samani and Dailami dynasties were established

in the North and South of Persia respectively, and quite independent

of the Khalifs of Baghdad.

 

In A.D. 909, the Fatimites, so designated from one Obaid Allah, a real

or pretended descendant of Ali and Fatima, the daughter of Muhammad,

established themselves in the North of Africa, and consolidated their

power there. In A.D. 972 Al-Moizz, or Abu Tamim, a great-grandson of

Obaid Allah, the founder of the Fatimite dynasty at Tunis, sent his

general Jawhar with an army to invade Egypt. The country was

conquered, the city of Cairo built, the seat of government was

transferred there, and the title of Khalif assumed by the Fatimites.

There they remained as reigning Khalifs until A.D. 1171, when

Salah-ad-Din (Saladin) usurped the sovereignty, and founded the

Ayoobite dynasty of Kurds, till its last ruler, Melik-al-Ashraf, was

deposed in A.D. 1250 by the Mamlook El Moizz, who in that year founded

the Baharite Mamlook dynasty, which lasted with variations in the

families till A.D. 1377. But in A.D. 1260 Ez-Zahir Beybars, a Mamlook

slave, secured the throne, and brought the then representative of the

Abbaside Khalifs (the family having been dethroned by the Mughals at

Baghdad in A.D. 1258) to Egypt, and recognised him as possessing

spiritual authority alone, but nothing else. From that time until the

taking of Egypt by Sultan Selim I. in A.D. 1517, the Abbaside Khalifs

retained the spiritual power first under the Baharite, and then under

the Circassian or Borgite Mamlooks. When Egypt became a Turkish

pashalic, Selim, the conqueror, compelled the representative of the

Abbaside Khalifs, by name Al-Motawukkel, to leave Cairo and reside in

Constantinople; and on his death the Ottoman Sultans assumed the title

of Khalif, which they hold to this day, and are recognised by the

Sunnis as the head of the Muhammadan religion, and the successors of

Muhammad.

 

As regards Syria and Palestine (two countries more or less closely

connected, owing to their proximity and absence of distinct and

defined boundaries), on the termination of the rule of the Omaiyides

at Damascus in A.D. 750, they remained nominally under the Abbasides

till A.D. 969, when Syria was conquered by the Fatimites, who were

succeeded by the Seljuks, who captured Damascus about A.D. 1075, and

Antioch A.D. 1085. The struggles with the Crusaders commenced in A.D.

1096, and continued until Saladin’s famous victory at Hattin in 1187,

when he became master of nearly the whole of Syria and Palestine.

Fighting still went on in these countries between the Franks and

others until A.D. 1518, when Selim I. conquered the country and

incorporated it with the Turkish Empire. No Arab prince has since

reigned in Egypt or Syria, though these countries have always

exercised certain influences over Arabia.

 

In Arabia itself, towards the end of the tenth century and the

beginning of the eleventh, A.D., the Karmathians had risen in revolt,

and detached that country from the Abbaside dynasty to such an extent

that she returned almost to her primitive independence. Indeed, it may

be said that, in the whole of Arabia, the Hijaz, with the Haram, or

sacred territory of Mecca, under the Shariff, or nobles, the lineal

descendants of the tribe of Koraish, alone retained some kind of

constituted authority, and paid allegiance sometimes to the government

of Baghdad, and sometimes to that of Egypt.

 

As already stated above, in A.D. 1517 the Turkish Sultan Selim I.

conquered Egypt, and obtained from the last real, or supposed

surviving, Abbaside kinsman of the Prophet a formal investiture of the

Muhammadan Khalifate. This was more religious than political in its

bearing, but still many of the tribes in Arabia offered their

allegiance to the Ottoman Government. From that time the Turks began

their dealings with Arabia, which remained in a sort of independence

under their own tribal Shaikhs, more or less according to the

circumstances of different districts, until the rise of the Wahhabi

movement, about the middle of the eighteenth century of our era.

The Wahhabi reform movement requires special mention. It began in

Arabia about A.D. 1740. The reformer and originator of the movement

was Muhammad bin Abdul Wahhab, born at the town of Aïnah, in the

centre of the Nejd district, A.D. 1691. He died in A.D. 1787, aged

ninety-six. After some years spent in travel and in study, he began

his preaching about A.D. 1731. Driven from Aïnah, his native place, as

Muhammad was driven from Mecca, Abdul Wahhab established himself at

ad-Diriyyah, where Muhammad bin Saood, the Shaikh of a sub-tribe of

the Anizeh, gave him shelter, and eventually married his daughter. By

preaching and fighting, his followers increased in number, and his

reforms spread throughout the Nejd district, and many converts were

made by him and his successors.

 

In A.D. 1797 a Turkish army from Baghdad attacked the Wahhabis, but

were beaten, and two years later Saood II. took and plundered Kerbela,

Taif, Mecca, and other places, and seems to have retained his power

and his government for several years.

 

In A.D. 1811 the Turks, who had quite lost their authority in Arabia,

requested Muhammad Ali of Egypt to put down the movement, and

reconquer the country. The first expedition, commanded by his son

Tussun, in its attempt to take Madinah, was nearly annihilated, but

succeeded the following year. Later on the campaign was conducted by

Muhammad Ali in person, and afterwards by his adopted son Ibrahim

Pasha, with considerable success. The final stronghold, ad-Diriyyah,

was captured in A.D. 1818, the Wahhabi chief captured, and sent first

to Egypt and then to Constantinople, where he was beheaded in December

of that year.

 

The Egyptian occupation of Arabia was followed by a renewal of the

Wahhabi movement, which eventually succeeded, in A.D. 1842, in driving

out the Egyptians, occupied as they were at the time with fighting the

Turks in Syria and Anatolia. Wahhabism was then re-established in some

parts, and independence in other parts, of the country; but on the

whole Wahhabism has never been very popular either in Arabia or India,

in which latter country it also has some followers. It may be regarded

as the latest sect of Islam, but does not make much progress.

Arabia may now be said to be under three different kinds of

government--i.e., partly under the Wahhabis, partly under the Turks,

and partly under independent rulers, while Aden has been held by the

English ever since its first capture in A.D. 1839. In other words, the

present position of Arabia may be more definitely described as

follows: Hasa, Hareek, the whole of Nejd, Kaseem, the provinces

adjoining Yaman on the north, and Aseer, forming a broad belt, and

stretching across the centre of the peninsula from the Red Sea to the

Persian Gulf, remain under Wahhabi influences. The Hijaz and some

sea-ports, such as Jedda and others, are at present absolutely under

the Turkish Government; while Bahrein, Oman and its capital Muscat,

and Yaman are more or less independent. Between Nejd and Syria a new

and promising kingdom has sprung up under Telal.

 

The time perhaps may come, and perhaps not far distant, when the Turks

will disappear altogether from Arabia, and Wahhabism and independent

tribes will alone remain. Another Muhammad or another Abdul Wahhab may

some day again appear, and bring together the tribes under one rule

for a time. It is doubtful, though, if ever the Arabs will again have

the power, talent, or enthusiasm to revive the glories of the Arabian

Empire, which now lives in history only, and is well worth a study.

For ready reference the following is a chronology of the dynasty of

the Ornaiyides, preceded by Muhammad and the first Khalifahs:

 

A.D.

        Muhammad the Apostle      622--632

        Abu Bakr                  632--634

        Omar I.                   634--643

        Othman                    643--655

        Ali                       655--660

     1. Moawia I.                 660--679

     2. Yazid I.                  679--683

     3. Moawia II.                683--683

     4. Marwan I.                 683--684

     5. Abdul-Malik               684--705

     6. Walid I.                  705--715

     7. Sulaiman                  715--717

     8. Omar II.                  717--720

     9. Yazid II.                 720--724

    10. Hashim                    724--743

    11. Walid II.                 743--744

    12. Yazid III.                744--744

    13. Ibrahim                   744--744

    14. Marwan II.                744--750

 

The dynasty of the Omaiyides was followed by that of the Abbasides,

who reigned as follows:

A.D.

     1. Abul-Abbas As-Saffah      750--754

     2. Al-Mansur                 754--775

     3. Al-Mahdi                  775--785

     4. Al-Hadi                   785--786

     5. Harun-ar-Rashid           786--809

     6. Al-Amin                   809--812

     7. Al-Mamun                  812--833

     8. Al-Mo’tasim Billah        833--842

     9. Al-Wathik                 842--847

    10. Al-Mutwakkil              847--861

    11. Al-Mustansir Billah       861--862

    12. Al-Mustain Billah         862--866

    13. Al-Mo’tiz Billah          866--869

    14. Al-Muhtadi Billah         869--870

    15. Al-Mo’tamid               870--892

    16. Al-Motazid Billah         892--902

    17. Al-Muktafi Billah         902--908

    18. Al-Muktadir Billah        908--932

    19. Al-Kahir Billah           932--934

    20. Al-Radhi Billah           934--940

    21. Al-Muttaki Billah         940--944

    22. Al-Mustakfi Billah        944--945

    23. Al-Mutia Billah           945--974

    24. Al-Taya Billah            974--991

    25. Al-Kadir Billah          991--1031

    26. Al-Kaim Billah          1031--1075

    27. Al-Muktadi Billah       1075--1094

    28. Al-Mustazhir Billah     1094--1118

    29. Al-Mustershid Billah    1118--1135

    30. Al-Rashid Billah        1135--1136

    31. Al-Muktafi              1136--1160

    32. Al-Mustanjid Billah     1160--1170

    33. Al-Mustazi              1170--1180

    34. Al-Nasir Billah         1180--1225

    35. Al-Tahir                1225--1226

36. Al-Mustansir Billah II. 1226--1240

37. Al-Mustaa’sim Billah    1240--1258

 

He was killed at the taking of Baghdad by Halaku Khan, and the last of

the dynasty, which continued, however, as a spiritual power in Egypt

till A.D. 1517.

 

The empire over which the Abbasides began to rule in A.D. 750 had

gradually dwindled away until little but Baghdad and its environs were

left on the fall of the dynasty in A.D. 1258. Will history repeat

itself in the same way as regards Constantinople, which in some years

may be the only territory left in Europe to a people who once were

conquerors, and whose arms even were carried to the walls of Vienna?

As Persia, Egypt, Syria, parts of Africa and Arabia, by degrees, were

severed from the Abbaside Empire, so the different provinces of Turkey

in Europe appear to be slowly separating themselves from the Turkish

Power, until finally there will be nothing left to them in Europe but

that city whose splendid position will ever make it a bone of

contention to both rising and declining States.

 

The following is a list of the Omaiyides who ruled in Spain A.D. 756

to 1031:

 

A.D.

     1. Abd-ar-Rahman I.       756-788

     2. Hisham I.              788-796

     3. Al-Hakim I.            796-822

     4. Abd-ar-Rahman II.      822-852

     5. Muhammad I.            852-886

     6. Al-Mundhir             886-888

     7. Abd-Allah              888-912

     8. Abd-ar-Rahman III.     912-961

 

He was one of the greatest of the rulers of Cordova. Under this prince,

who at last assumed the title of Khalif and Commander of the Faithful,

the unity of Muhammadan Spain was for the time restored.

 

A.D.

     9. Al-Hakim II.           961-976

    10. Hisham II.             976-1009

 

He was a Khalif only in name, while Muhammad Bin Ali Amir, surnamed

Al-Mansur, was the real ruler or regent till his death in A.D. 1002. He

was succeeded by his son, Abd-al-Malik, who ruled successfully till his

death in A.D. 1008, and was followed by his brother, Abd-ar-Rahman, who

was beheaded in A.D. 1009, Hisham II. having been previously deposed.

 

A.D.

    11. Muhammad II. (Al-Mahdi-billah)     1009-1009

    12. Sulaiman                           1009-1010

        Hisham II. for the second time     1010-1013

        Sulaiman for the second time       1013-1016

(1) Ali bin Hammud, a Berber chief 1016-1018

    13. Abd-ar-Rahman IV.                  1018-1019

        (2) Al Kasim bin Hammud            1019-1023

    14. Abd-ar-Rahman V.                   1023-1024

    15. Muhammad III.                      1024-1025

        (3) Yabya bin Ali bin Hammud       1025-1027

    16. Hisham III.                        1027-1031

 

A complete list of all the Muhammadan rulers in Spain will be found in Makkari’s history of these dynasties, translated by Gayangos.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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