Al-Qa'im (Abbasid caliph at Baghdad)

Abu Ja'far ibn Ahmad al-Qadir (Arabic: أبو جعفر بن أحمد القادر) better known by his regnal name Al-Qa'im bi-amri 'llah (Arabic: القائم بأمر الله, lit.'he who carries out the command of God' or simply as Al-Qa'im; 1001 – 2 April 1075) was the Abbasid caliph in Baghdad from 1031 to 1075. He was the son of the previous caliph, al-Qadir.

Al-Qa'im bi-amri 'llah
القائم بأمر الله
Khalīfah
Amir al-Mu'minin
Gold dinar minted with the names of al-Qa'im and sultan Tughril in Isfahan 448 AH/1056/7 CE
26th Caliph of the Abbasid Caliphate
Abbasid Caliph in Baghdad
Reign29 November 1031 – 2 April 1075
PredecessorAl-Qadir
SuccessorAl-Muqtadi
Born1001
Baghdad, Abbasid Caliphate (now Iraq)
Died2 April 1075 (aged 7374)
Baghdad, Abbasid Caliphate
ConsortKhadija Arslan Khatun
(daughter of Chaghri Beg)
Issue
Names
Abu Ja'far ibn Ahmad al-Qadir Al-Qa'im bi-amri 'llah
Era name and dates
Later Abbasid era: 11th century
DynastyAbbasid
Fatheral-Qadir
MotherBadr al-Dija (Qatr al-Nida)
ReligionSunni Islam

Early life

Al-Qa'im was the son of Abbasid caliph al-Qadir (r. 991–1031) and his mother was Badr al-Dija (also known as Qatr al-Nīda). He was born in Baghdad in 1001. He spend his childhood and early life in Baghdad.

His father, Al-Qadir had public proclaimed his just nine-year-old son Muhammad (elder brother of Al-Qa'im) as heir apparent, with the title of al-Ghalib Bi'llah, in 1001.[1][2] However, Muhammad died before his father and never access to the throne. Al-Qadir's proclamation of his son as heir was a response to the pretender Abdallah ibn Uthman. The Karakhanids soon recognized the Abbasid caliph's suzerainty for the first time, and dropped their support of the pretender.[3][2] The pretender then arrived in Baghdad, where he secretly gathered support, before moving again to the east via Basra, Kufa, and Kirman. He was finally arrested by the Ghaznavids on al-Qadir's orders, and died in captivity.[4]

In 1030, al-Qadir named his son Abu Ja'far, the future Al-Qa'im, as his heir, a decision taken completely independently of the Buyid emirs.[5][6] Al-Qadir died after an illness on 29 November 1031. Initially he was buried in the caliphal palace, but in the next year he was ceremonially moved to al-Rusafa.[3]

Biography

During the first half of al-Qa'im's long reign, hardly a day passed in the capital without turmoil. Frequently the city was left without a ruler; the Buwayhid ruler was often forced to flee the capital. While the Seljuk dynasty's influence grew, Chaghri Beg married his daughter, Arslan Khatun Khadija,[7] to Al-Qa'im in 1056.[8]

Fakhr ad-Dawla Muhammad ibn Muhammad ibn Jahir[9] was appointed as vizier by al-Qa'im in 1062. Fakhr ad-Dawla arrived and was "showered with gifts, robes of honor, and the title Fakhr ad-Dawla ('glory of the dynasty')."[9] According to Sibt ibn al-Jawzi, he was also given the additional title Sharaf al-wuzarā'.[9]

Fakhr ad-Dawla's first tenure lasted until 1068,[10] when he was dismissed for a series of "infractions" (dhunūb) he had committed.[9] The reasons included "his presence in the Bāb al-Hujra (Privy Chamber) without permission, and his wearing of 'Adud ad-Dawla's ceremonial robes."[9] In other words, he had been acting above his station.[9] According to the diary of Abu Ali ibn al-Banna, the dismissal was on Tuesday, 9 September 1068.[10] Fakhr ad-Dawla was "despondent and apologetic" and "acquiesced in tears".[9] He was escorted out of Baghdad on Thursday night (11 September) and ended up traveling to the court of the Banu Mazyad ruler Nur ad-Dawla Dubays.[10][note 1] His belongings were later sent to him.[10]

The competition to replace Fakhr ad-Dawla as vizier was fierce.[9] Three different candidates were seriously considered, but none of them successfully took office as vizier.[10] The caliph's initial choice was Abu Ya'la, father of Abu Shuja al-Rudhrawari, but he died on 11 September - before Fakhr ad-Dawla had even left Baghdad.[10][11] Another early front-runner was the za'im Ibn Abd ar-Rahim, who was sent a letter to inform him of his selection to the vizierate before someone brought his sordid past to the caliph's attention: he had been part of al-Basasiri's entourage during his rebellion in 1058, and he had taken part in looting the caliph's palace and "attacking" the women of the harem.[9][11][note 2] His name was immediately removed from contention.[9] At this point, around mid-late November, Ibn al-Banna wrote that a rumor had started to go around that al-Qa'im would reinstate Fakhr ad-Dawla as vizier.[10] At some point, another candidate, a Hanbali named Abu'l-'Ala', was considered, but he never took office.[11]

Meanwhile, Nur ad-Dawla Dubays had been making "entreaties to the caliph" on Fakhr ad-Dawla's behalf.[9] Eventually, Fakhr ad-Dawla was brought back to serve as vizier.[9] A group of administrative officials went out to meet with him on Sunday, 7 December, in advance of his return to Baghdad.[11] Ibn al-Banna's diary gives the date of his reentry to Baghdad as Wednesday, 10 December 1068.[11] Crowds came to watch and he was "met by the troops, the courtiers, and the leading figures".[11] Vizieral robes of honor were made ready for him on 29 December, and they were bestowed upon him on Wednesday, 31 December.[11] People went to congratulate him the next day.[11] Then on Friday, 2 January 1069, he went on horseback to the Jami al-Mansur in the robes of honor; again, crowds gathered to see him, and in some places they "sprinkled" coins on him.[11]

Al-Qa'im does not seem to have held a grudge against Fakhr ad-Dawla and entrusted him and his son Amid ad-Dawla with a wide range of duties.[9] Sometime around 1071, there was a "diplomatic fracas" between Fakhr ad-Dawla and the Seljuk administration involving a delay in exchanging robes of honor.[9] When Alp Arslan died in 1072, the Banu Jahir were tasked with overseeing the official mourning as well as the ceremonial exchange of loyalty and robes of honor between al-Qa'im and the new Seljuk sultan Malik-Shah I.[9] On 26 September 1073, Fakhr ad-Dawla oversaw the signing of the controversial Hanbali scholar Ibn Aqil's public recantation of his beliefs at the caliphal chancery.[12] This document of retraction is the only one of its kind to survive in full from the middle ages to the present day; the episode marked the ascendancy of traditionalism in Baghdad in the 11th century.[12]

The Seljuk ruler Toghrül overran Syria and Armenia. He then cast an eye upon Baghdad. It was at a moment when the city was in the last agony of violence and fanaticism. Toghrül, under cover of intended pilgrimage to Mecca, entered Iraq with a heavy force, and assuring the Caliph of pacific views and subservience to his authority, begged permission to visit the capital. The Turks and Buwayhids were unfavorable, but Toghrül was acknowledged as Sultan by the Caliph in the public prayers. A few days after, Toghrül himself — having sworn to be true not only to the Caliph, but also to the Buwayhid amir, al-Malik al-Rahim, made his entry into the capital, where he was well received both by chiefs and people.

During this and the previous caliphs' period, literature, especially Persian literature, flourished under the patronage of the Buwayhids. The famous philosopher al-Farabi died in 950; al-Mutanabbi, acknowledged in the East as the greatest of Arabic poets, and himself an Arab, in 965; and the Persian Abu Ali Husayn ibn Abdallah ibn Sina (Avicenna) in 1037.

In 1058 in Bahrain, a dispute over the reading of the khutba in Al-Qa'im's name between members of the Abd al-Qays tribe and the millenarian Ismaili Qarmatian state prompted a revolt led by Abu al-Bahlul al-Awwam that threw off Qarmatian rule and led to the unravelling of the Qarmatian state which finally collapsed in al-Hasa in 1067.[13]

Death

When al-Qa'im was on his deathbed in 1075, Fakhr ad-Dawla took charge of his personal care - al-Qa'im did not want bloodletting but Fakhr ad-Dawla had it done anyway.[9] Before he died, al-Qa'im advised his grandson and successor al-Muqtadi to keep the Banu Jahir in their position: "I have not seen better persons for the dawla than Ibn Jahir and his son; do not turn away from them."[9]

Al-Qa'im died in 1075 at the age of 73–74. He was succeeded by his grandson Al-Muqtadi as the twenty-seventh Abbasid Caliph.

Al-Muqtadi was born to Muhammad Dhakirat ibn al-Qa'im, and an Armenian slave girl.[14]

See also

Notes

  1. Sibt ibn al-Jawzi and Abu Ali ibn al-Banna say this was at al-Hillah, while Ibn al-Athir and al-Bundari say it was at Fallujah instead.[9][10]
  2. The sources don't specify if this was sexual violence or just plain violence.

References

  1. Sourdel 1978, p. 378.
  2. Busse 2004, p. 70.
  3. Küçükaşcı 2001, p. 127.
  4. Busse 2004, pp. 70–71.
  5. Sourdel 1978, p. 379.
  6. Busse 2004, p. 72.
  7. Bosworth, C. E. (1968). "The Political and Dynastic History of the Iranian World". In Boyle, J. A. (ed.). The Cambridge History of Iran. Vol. 5. Cambridge University Press. p. 48.
  8. Bosworth, C. E. (1970). "Dailamīs in Central Iran: The Kākūyids of Jibāl and Yazd". Iran. 8 (1): 73–95 [p. 86]. doi:10.2307/4299634. JSTOR 4299634.
  9. Hanne, Eric (2008). "The Banu Jahir and Their Role in the Abbasid and Saljuq Administrations". Al-Masaq. 20 (1): 29–45. Retrieved 22 March 2022.
  10. Makdisi, George (1956). "Autograph Diary of an Eleventh-Century Historian of Baghdād--II". Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. 18 (2): 239–60. Retrieved 27 March 2022.
  11. Makdisi, George (1957). "Autograph Diary of an Eleventh-Century Historian of Baghdād--III". Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. 19 (1): 13–48. Retrieved 27 March 2022.
  12. Makdisi, George (1997). Ibn 'Aqil: Religion and Culture in Classical Islam. Edinburgh University Press. pp. 3–5. ISBN 0 7486 0960 1. Retrieved 28 March 2022.
  13. Larsen, Curtis E. (1984). Life and Land Use on the Bahrain Islands: The Geoarchaeology of an Ancient Society. University Of Chicago Press. p. 65. ISBN 0-226-46906-9.
  14. Bennison, Amira K. (2009) The Great Caliphs: The Golden Age of the 'Abbasid Empire. Princeton: Yale University Press, p. 47. ISBN 0300167989

Sources

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.