Abu'l-Asa'ir Ahmad ibn Nasr

Abu'l-Asa'ir Ahmad ibn Nasr was a military commander for the Abbasid Caliphate and the governor of Tarsus from March 903 to August 905.

Life

Map of the Arab–Byzantine frontier zone in the 8th–10th centuries

Abu'l-Asa'ir was appointed to the post of governor (wali or amir) of Tarsus and of the Cilician border zone (ath-thughur ash-Shamiya) with the Byzantine Empire on 22 March 903, succeeding Muzaffar ibn Hajj. He set out from Baghdad on 12 May in direction of the border, accompanied by troops as well as by gifts from Caliph al-Muktafi to the Byzantine emperor Leo VI the Wise.[1][2]

In late summer or autumn of 904, he mediated for the conclusion of a truce and a prisoner exchange with the Byzantines, to take place in the next year. In the meantime, however, the Byzantine general Andronikos Doukas invaded Arab territory and sacked Marash (Germanikeia), leading to Abu'l-Asa'ir's dismissal and replacement by Rustam ibn Baradu.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 PmbZ, Abū l-ʻAšā’ir Aḥmad b. Naṣr (#20039).
  2. Stern 1960, p. 221.

Sources

Preceded by
Muzaffar ibn Hajj
Governor of Tarsus
903–905
Succeeded by
Rustam ibn Baradu
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