Al-Mu'tadid

For the 11th-century ruler of the taifa of Seville, see Abbad II al-Mu'tadid.

Al-Mu'tadid bi-llah
المعتضد بالله

Gold dinar of al-Mu'tadid, AH 285 (AD 892/3)
16th Caliph of the Abbasid Caliphate
Reign October 892 – 5 April 902
Predecessor al-Mu'tamid
Successor al-Muktafi
Born ca. 854 or ca. 861
Died 5 April 902
Baghdad
Burial Baghdad
Consort Qatr al-Nada bint Khumarawayh
Issue
Father al-Muwaffaq
Mother Dirar
Religion Sunni Islam

Abu'l-Abbas Ahmad ibn Talha al-Muwaffaq (854 or 861 – 5 April 902), better known by his regnal name al-Mu'tadid bi-llah (Arabic: المعتضد بالله, "Seeking Support in God"[1]) was the Abbasid Caliph in Baghdad from 892 until his death in 902.

Al-Mu'tadid was the son of al-Muwaffaq, who was the regent and virtual ruler of the Abbasid state during the reign of his brother, Caliph al-Mu'tamid. As a prince, the future al-Mu'tadid served under his father in various military campaigns, most notably in the suppression of the Zanj Rebellion, in which he played a major role. When al-Muwaffaq died in June 891 al-Mu'tadid succeeded him as regent. He quickly sidelined his cousin and heir-apparent al-Mufawwad, and when al-Mu'tamid died in October 892, he succeeded to the throne. Like his father, al-Mu'tadid's power depended on his close relations with the army, first forged in the campaigns against the Zanj and reinforced in later expeditions which the Caliph led in person: al-Mu'tadid would prove to be the most militarily active of all Abbasid caliphs. Through his energy and ability, he succeeded in restoring to the Abbasid state some of the power and provinces it had lost during the turmoil of the previous decades.

In a series of campaigns he recovered the Jazira, Thughur and Jibal, and effected a rapprochement with the Saffarids in the east and the Tulunids in the west that secured their—albeit largely nominal—recognition of caliphal suzerainty. These successes came at the cost of gearing the economy almost exclusively towards maintenance of the army, which resulted in the expansion and rise to power of the central fiscal bureaucracy and contributed to the Caliph's lasting reputation for avarice. Al-Mu'tadid was also renowned for his cruelty when punishing criminals, and subsequent chroniclers record his extensive and ingenious use of torture. His reign also saw the permanent move of the capital back to Baghdad, where he engaged in major building activities.

Despite his successes, al-Mu'tadid's reign was ultimately too short to effect a lasting reversal of the Caliphate's fortunes, and the "Abbasid revival" that he spearheaded was too dependent on the presence of capable personalities at the helm of the state. The brief reign of his less able son and heir, al-Muktafi, still saw some major gains, but his later successors lacked his energy. In addition, the factionalism within the bureaucracy that had become apparent during the later years of al-Mu'tadid's reign would debilitate the Abbasid government for decades to come, leading to the subjugation of the Caliphate to a series of military strongmen, culminating in the conquest of Baghdad by the Buyids in 946.

Early life

Family tree of the Abbasid dynasty in the middle and late 9th century

Al-Mu'tadid was born Ahmad, the son of Talha, one of the sons of the Caliph al-Mutawakkil (r. 847–861), and a Greek slave named Dirar. The exact date of his birth is unknown; as he is variously recorded as being thirty-eight or thirty-one years old at the time of his accession, he was born either in ca. 854 or ca. 861.[2][3][4] In 861, al-Mutawakkil was murdered, beginning a period of internal turmoil, known as the "Anarchy at Samarra" from the site of the Caliphate's capital, which ended in 870 with the rise to the throne of Ahmad's uncle, al-Mu'tamid. Real power however had come to lie with the elite Turkish troops and with Ahmad's own father, Talha, who, as the Caliphate's main military commander, served as the chief intermediary between the caliphal government and the Turks. Assuming the honorific name al-Muwaffaq in the style of the caliphs, Talha soon became the effective ruler of the Caliphate, a position consolidated in 882 after a failed attempt by al-Mu'tamid to flee to Egypt led to his confinement in house arrest.[5][6]

Caliphal authority in the provinces collapsed during the "Anarchy at Samarra", with the result that by the 870s the central government had lost effective control over most of the Caliphate outside the metropolitan region of Iraq. In the west, Egypt had fallen under the control of Ahmad ibn Tulun, who also disputed control of Syria with al-Muwaffaq, while Khurasan and most of the Islamic East had been taken over by the Saffarids, who replaced the Abbasids' loyal clients, the Tahirids. Most of the Arabian peninsula was likewise lost to local potentates, while in Tabaristan a radical Zaydi Shi'a dynasty took power. Even in Iraq, the rebellion of the Zanj slaves threatened Baghdad itself, and further south the Qarmatians were a nascent threat.[7][8][9] Al-Muwaffaq's regency was thus a continuous struggle to save the tottering Caliphate from collapse.[10] His attempts to recover control of Egypt and Syria from Ibn Tulun failed, with the latter even able to expand his territory and obtain his recognition as hereditary ruler,[11][12] but he succeeded in preserving the core of the Caliphate in Iraq by repelling a Saffarid invasion aiming to capture Baghdad, and by subduing the Zanj after a long struggle.[6][13]

Map of Iraq in the 9th–10th centuries

It was against the Zanj that the future al-Mu'tadid—at this time usually referred to by his kunya of Abu'l-Abbas—would acquire his first military experience and establish the close ties with the army that would characterize his reign. Al-Muwaffaq gave his son a military training from an early age, and the young prince became "a keen horseman and took care to inspect both his troops and their mounts in person" (Hugh N. Kennedy).[2][14]

Within a decade from the outbreak of the revolt in 869, the Zanj had seized most of lower Iraq, including the cities of Basra and Wasit, and expanded into Khuzistan as well.[6][15] In 879 the death of the founder of the Saffarid state, Ya'qub al-Saffar, allowed the Abbasid government to fully concentrate its attention against the Zanj rebellion,[6] and Abu'l-Abbas' appointment in December 879 to command against the rebels at the head of 10,000 troops marks the turning-point of the war.[16] In the long and hard struggle that followed, which involved amphibious operations in the Mesopotamian Marshes, Abu'l-Abbas and his own military slaves (ghilman)—of which the long-serving Zirak al-Turki was the chief—played the major role: although the Abbasid armies eventually swelled with reinforcements, volunteers, and Zanj defectors, it was the few but elite ghilman who formed the army's backbone, filling its leadership positions and bearing the brunt of the battle, often under the personal command of Abu'l-Abbas.[17] After years of gradually tightening the noose around the Zanj, in August 883 the Abbasid troops stormed their capital of al-Mukhtara, putting an end to the rebellion.[18][19] The detailed account of the war, written by a former Zanj rebel and preserved in the history of al-Tabari, stresses the role of al-Muwaffaq and Abu'l-Abbas as the heroes who, in defence of the embattled Muslim state, suppressed the rebellion; the successful campaign would become a major tool in their propaganda effort to legitimize their de facto usurpation of the Caliph's power.[20]

Following the death of Ibn Tulun in May 884, the two caliphal generals Ishaq ibn Kundaj and Ibn Abu'l-Saj sought to take advantage of the situation and attacked the Tulunid domains in Syria, but their initial gains were rapidly reversed. In the spring of 885, Abu'l-Abbas was sent to take charge of the invasion. He soon succeeded in defeating the Tulunids and forcing them to retreat to Palestine, but after a quarrel with Ibn Kundaj and Ibn Abu'l-Saj, the latter abandoned the campaign and withdrew their forces. In the Battle of Tawahin on 6 April, Abu'l-Abbas confronted Ibn Tulun's son and heir, Khumarawayh, in person. The Abbasid prince was initially victorious, forcing Khumarawayh to flee, but was in turn defeated and fled the battlefield, while much of his army was taken prisoner.[21][22] After this victory the Tulunids expanded their control over the Jazira and the borderlands (the Thughur) with the Byzantine Empire. A peace agreement followed in 886, whereby al-Muwaffaq was forced to recognize Khumarawayh as hereditary governor over Egypt and Syria for 30 years, in exchange for an annual tribute.[11][12] Over the next couple of years, Abu'l-Abbas was involved in his father's ultimately unsuccessful attempts to wrest control of Fars from Saffarid control.[23]

During this period, the relations between Abu'l-Abbas and his father deteriorated, although the reason is unclear. Already in 884, Abu'l-Abbas' ghilman rioted in Baghdad against al-Muwaffaq's vizier, Sa'id ibn Makhlad, possibly over unpaid salaries.[2][24] Eventually, in 889, Abu'l-Abbas was arrested and put in prison on his father's orders, where he remained despite the demonstrations of the ghilman loyal to him. He apparently remained under arrest until May 891, when al-Muwaffaq, already nearing his death, returned to Baghdad after two years he spent in Jibal.[2][24] Al-Muwaffaq, suffering from gout,[1] was already visibly nearing his end; the vizier Isma'il ibn Bulbul and the city commander of Baghdad, Abu'l-Saqr, called al-Mu'tamid and his sons, including the heir-apparent al-Mufawwad, into the city, hoping to exploit al-Muwaffaq's imminent death for their own purposes. Nevertheless, the popularity of Abu'l-Abbas with the soldiers and the common people was such that he was set free, his opponents' houses were ransacked by the mob, and the attempt to sideline him failed.[25][26]

Thus, when al-Muwaffaq died in June 891, Abu'l-Abbas succeeded him immediately in his offices, with the title of al-Mu'tadid bi-llah and a position in the line of succession after the Caliph and al-Mufawwad. Within a few months, in April 892, al-Mu'tadid had his cousin removed from the succession—and probably killed—so that when al-Mu'tamid died in October, possibly poisoned, he succeeded to the throne as caliph.[27][28][29]

Reign

Harold Bowen describes al-Mu'tadid at his accession as "in appearance upright and thin; and on his head was a white mole, which, since white moles were not admired, he used to dye black. His expression was haughty. In character he was brave—a story was told of his killing a lion with only a dagger. [...] he had inherited all his father's energy, and cultivated a reputation of prompt action."[4] Like his father, al-Mu'tadid’s power rested on his close relations with the military, and it was military activities which consumed his interest, especially as he usually led his army in person on campaign. As the historian Michael Bonner comments, "[t]he role of 'ghazī caliph', invented by Harun al-Rashid and enhanced by al-Mu'tasim, now had its greatest performance, in al-Mu'tadid's tireless campaigning".[28][30]

Campaigns of reunification

From the start of his reign, the new Caliph set out to reverse the fragmentation of the Abbasid Caliphate,[2] a goal towards with he worked by a mixture of force and diplomacy; although an active and enthusiastic campaigner, al-Mu'tadid was also "a skilful diplomat, always prepared to make compromises with those who were too powerful to defeat" (Hugh Kennedy).[30] This policy became immediately evident in the conciliatory attitude the new Caliph adopted towards his most powerful vassal, the Tulunids: in spring 893, al-Mu'tadid recognized and reconfirmed Khumarawayh in his office as autonomous emir over Egypt and Syria, in exchange for an annual tribute of 300,000 dinars and further 200,000 dinars in arrears, as well as the return to caliphal control of the two Jaziran provinces of Diyar Rabi'a and Diyar Mudar.[31] In order to seal the pact, Khumarawayh offered his daughter, Qatr al-Nada ("Dew Drop") as bride to one of the Caliph's sons, but al-Mu'tadid chose to marry her himself. The Tulunid princess brought with her a million dinars as her dowry, a "wedding gift that was considered the most sumptuous in medieval Arab history" (Th. Bianquis).[21][32] Her arrival in Baghdad was marked by the luxury and extravagance of her retinue, which contrasted starkly with the impoverished caliphal court. According to a story, after a thorough search, al-Mu'tadid's chief eunuch could only find five ornate silver-and-gold candlesticks to decorate the palace, while the princess was accompanied by 150 servants each carrying such a candlestick. Thereupon al-Mu'tadid is said to have remarked "come let us go and hide ourselves, lest we be seen in our poverty".[21] Qatr al-Nada died soon after the wedding, and the murder of Khumarawayh in 896 left the Tulunid state in the unsteady hands of Khumarawayh's under-age sons. Al-Mu'tadid swiftly took advantage of this and in 897 extended his control over the border emirates of the Thughur, where, in the words of Michael Bonner, "[he] assumed, after a long hiatus, the old caliphal prerogative of commanding the annual summer expedition and arranging the defence against the Byzantine empire". In addition, to secure caliphal recognition of his position, the new Tulunid ruler Harun ibn Khumarawayh (r. 896–904) was forced to further concessions, handing back all of Syria north of Homs, and increasing the annual tribute to 450,000 dinars.[33][30] Over the next few years, increasing domestic turmoil in the remaining Tulunid domains, and the escalation of Qarmatian attacks, encouraged many Tulunid followers to defect to the resurgent Caliphate.[33]

Map of the Jazira (Upper Mesopotamia), with its provinces, in medieval times

In the Jazira the new Caliph struggled against a variety of opponents: alongside an almost thirty-year-old Kharijite rebellion, there were various autonomous local magnates, chiefly the Shaybani ruler of Amid and Diyar Bakr, Ahmad ibn Isa al-Shaybani, and the Taghlibi chief Hamdan ibn Hamdun. In 893, while the Kharijites were distracted by internal quarrels, al-Mu'tadid captured Mosul from the Shayban. Next, in 895 Hamdan ibn Hamdun was evicted from his strongholds, hunted down and captured. Finally, the Kharijite leader Harun ibn Abdallah himself was defeated and captured by Hamdan's son Husayn in 896, before being sent to Baghdad, where he was crucified. This exploit marked the beginning of an illustrious career for Husayn ibn Hamdan in the caliphal armies, and the gradual rise of the Hamdanid family to power in the Jazira.[2][34][3] Ahmad al-Shaybani retained Amid until his death in 898, being succeeded by his son Muhammad. In the next year, al-Mu'tadid returned to the Jazira, ousted Muhammad from Amid, and reunified the entire province under central government control by installing his son and heir, Ali al-Muktafi, as governor.[2][35]

Al-Mu'tadid was unable, however, to restore effective caliphal control north of the Jazira in Transcaucasia, where Armenia and Adharbayjan remained in the hands of virtually independent local dynasties.[35] Ibn Abu'l-Saj, who was now the caliphal governor of Adharbayjan, proclaimed himself independent in ca. 898, although soon he recognized again the Caliph's suzerainty during his conflicts with the Christian Armenian princes. When he died in 901, he was succeeded by his son Devdad, marking the consolidation of the semi-independent Sajid dynasty in the region.[36] In 900 Ibn Abu'l-Saj was even suspected of plotting to seize the Diyar Mudar province with the co-operation of the notables of Tarsus, after which the vengeful Caliph ordered the latter arrested and the city's fleet burned.[3][37] This decision was a major self-inflicted wound on the centuries-long war against Byzantium, for in the past decades the Tarsians and their fleet had played a major role in the raids against the Byzantine frontier provinces.[38] While a Syrian fleet under the renegade Damian of Tarsus sacked the port of Demetrias in ca. 900, and Arab fleets would go on wreak havoc in the Aegean Sea over the next two decades, on land, the Byzantines, strengthened by an influx of Armenian refugees like Melias, began to expand their control over the border regions, scoring victories and founding new provinces (themes) in the former no-man's land between the two empires.[39]

In the Islamic East, the Caliph was forced to acknowledge the reality of the Saffarids' domination and established a modus vivendi with them, perhaps hoping, according to Hugh Kennedy, to harness them in a partnership analogous to that which the Tahirids had enjoyed in previous decades. Consequently, the Saffarids were recognized in their possession of Khurasan and eastern Persia as well as Fars, while the Abbasids were to exercise direct control over western Persia, namely Jibal, Rayy and Isfahan.[2][33] This policy gave the Caliph free hand to recover the territories of the Dulafids, another semi-independent local dynasty that was centred on Isfahan and Nihavand. When the Dulafid Ahmad ibn Abd al-Aziz ibn Abi Dulaf died in 893, al-Mu'tadid moved swiftly to install his son al-Muktafi as governor in Rayy, Qazvin, Qum and Hamadan. The Dulafids were confined to their core region around Karaj and Isfahan, before being deposed outright in 896. Nevertheless, Abbasid hold over these territories remained precarious, especially due to the proximity of the Zaydi emirate in Tabaristan, and in 897 Rayy was handed over to Saffarid control.[33][40]

The Abbasid–Saffarid partnership in Iran was most clearly expressed in their joint effort against the general Rafi ibn Harthama, who had made his base in Rayy and posed a threat to both caliphal and Saffarid interests in the region. Al-Mu'tadid sent Ahmad ibn Abd al-Aziz to seize Rayy from Rafi, who fled and made common cause with the Zaydis of Tabaristan in an effort to seize Khurasan from the Saffarids. However, with Amr mobilizing the anti-Alid sentiments of the populace against him and the expected assistance from the Zaydis failing to materialize, Rafi was defeated and killed in Khwarazm in 896. Amr, now at the pinnacle of his power, sent the defeated rebel's head to Baghdad, and in 897 the Caliph transferred control of Rayy to him.[41] The partnership finally collapsed after Mu'tadid appointed the Saffarid ruler Amr ibn al-Layth in 898 as governor of Transoxiana, which was ruled by his rivals, the Samanids. Al-Mu'tamid deliberately encouraged Amr to confront the Samanids, only for Amr to be crushingly defeated and taken prisoner by the latter in 900. The Samanid ruler, Isma'il ibn Ahmad, sent him in chains to Baghdad, where he was executed in 902, after al-Mu'tadid's death. Al-Mu'tadid in turn conferred Amr's titles and governorships to Isma'il ibn Ahmad. The Caliph also moved to regain Fars and Kirman, but the Saffarid remnant under Tahir proved sufficiently resilient to thwart the Abbasid attempts at capturing these two provinces for several years. It was not until 910 that the Abbasids managed to regain the coveted Fars province.[2][42][43]

At the same time, the Caliphate faced a new threat, the Qarmatians. A radical Islamic sect founded in Kufa around 874, the Qarmatians were originally a sporadic and minor nuisance in the Sawad, but their power grew swiftly to alarming proportions after 897: under the leadership of Abu Sa'id al-Jannabi, they seized Bahrayn in 899 and in the next year defeated a caliphal army under al-Abbas ibn Amr al-Ghanawi. In the years following al-Mu'tadid's death, the Qarmatians "were to prove the most dangerous enemies the Abbasids had faced since the time of the Zanj" (H. Kennedy).[2][44] The same period also saw more anti-Abbasid regimes established on the periphery of the Islamic world: the Fatimids seized power in Ifriqiya,[45] and another Zaydi dynasty was established in Yemen.[46]

Domestic government

Map showing the result of al-Mu'tadid's campaigns of consolidation, ca. 900: areas under direct Abbasid control in dark green, areas under loose Abbasid suzerainty, but under autonomous governors, in light green

The Abbasid army, following the reforms of al-Mu'tasim, was a smaller and more professional fighting force than the caliphal armies of the past. Although it proved militarily highly effective, it also posed a potential danger to the stability of the Abbasid regime: drawn from Turks and other peoples from the Caliphate's periphery and the lands beyond, it was alienated from the society of the Caliphate's heartlands, with the result that the soldiers were "entirely reliant on the state not just for cash but for their very survival" (Hugh Kennedy). As a result, any failure by the central government to provide their pay resulted in a military uprising and a political crisis, as was demonstrated in the Anarchy at Samarra.[47] Consequently, ensuring the regular payment of the army became the prime task of the state. According to Hugh Kennedy, based on a treasury document from the time of al-Mu'tadid's accession, "out the total expenditure of 7915 dinars per day, some 5121 are entirely military, 1943 in areas (like riding animals and stables) which served both military and non-military and only 851 in areas like the bureaucracy and the harem which can be described as truly civilian (though even in this case, the bureaucrats’ main purpose seems to have been to arrange the payment of the army). It seems reasonable to conclude that something over 80 per cent of recorded government expenditure was devoted to maintaining the army."[48]

At the same time, however, the Caliphate' fiscal basis had shrunk dramatically after so many tax-paying provinces had been lost from the central government's control.[49] The caliphal government was now increasingly reliant on the revenue of the Sawad and the other areas of lower Iraq, but there the 9th century witnessed a rapid decline in agricultural productivity due to the disruption of the civil wars and neglect of the irrigation network: by the early 10th century the Sawad, which in the reign of Harun al-Rashid provided annual revenue of 102,500,000 dirhams—more than double the revenue of Egypt and three times that of Syria—provided less than a third of that figure.[50][51] The situation was further exacerbated by the fact that in the remaining provinces, semi-autonomous governors, grandees and members of the dynasty were able to establish virtual latifundia, aided by the system of muqata'a, a form of tax farming in exchange for a fixed tribute, which they often failed to pay.[50][52] To maximise their revenue from the territory remaining to them, the Abbasids increased the breadth and complexity of the central bureaucracy, dividing the provinces into smaller tax districts as well as increasing the number of the fiscal departments (diwans), allowing for a far closer oversight of both revenue collection and the activities of the officials themselves.[53]

To combat this fiscal crisis, the Caliph would often personally devote himself to the supervision of revenue, acquiring a reputation for "a spirit of economy, verging on avarice" (F. Malti-Douglas); he was said to "examine petty accounts that a commoner would scorn to consider" (H. Bowen).[4][54] Fines and confiscations multiplied under his rule, with the resulting revenue, along with the income from the crown domain and even a portion of the provincial taxation, flowing to the caliphal privy purse (bayt mal al-khaṣṣa). The latter now acquired a leading role among the other fiscal departments, and it frequently held more money than the public treasury (bayt mal al-ʿamma) itself.[55][56] By the end of al-Mu'tadid's reign, the once empty privy purse would contain ten million dinars.[4] On the other hand, in gesture aimed to ease the tax burden of the farmers, in 895 the Caliph changed the start of the tax year from the Persian New Year in March to 11 June—which became known as Nayrūz al-Mu'tadid, "al-Mu'tadid's New Year"—so that the land tax (kharāj) was now collected after the harvest instead of before.[30][57]

The Caliph's policies strengthened the position of the civil bureaucracy, which now reached the apogee of its influence, and especially the vizier, whom even the army came to respect as the spokesman of the caliph.[13] In terms of personnel, al-Mu'tadid's reign was marked by continuity among the senior leadership of the state. Ubayd Allah ibn Sulayman ibn Wahb remained vizier from the start of the reign until his death in 901, and was succeeded by his son, al-Qasim, who had from the start been deputizing his father during the latter's absences from the capital. The freedman Badr, a veteran who had served under al-Muwaffaq and whose daughter married the Caliph's son, remained commander of the army. The fiscal departments, especially of the Sawad (Lower Iraq), were managed first by the Banu'l-Furat brothers Ahmad and Ali, and after 899 by the Banu'l-Jarrah under Muhammad ibn Dawud and his nephew, Ali ibn Isa.[58][59][60] The original administrative team was so effective and harmonious that according to the 11th-century historian Hilal as-Sabi, it was said by subsequent generations that "there had never been such a quartet, Caliph, Vizier, Commander, and chief of the diwans, as al-Mu'tadid, Ubayd Allah, Badr and Ahmad ibn al-Furat".[61] On the other hand, Michel Bonner points out that the later reign of al-Mu'tadid "saw a growth of factionalism within this bureaucracy, observable also in the army and in urban civilian life".[59] The rivalry between the two bureaucratic dynasties of the Banu'l-Furat and the Banu'l-Jarrah, with their extensive networks of clients, began at this time. Although a strong caliph and vizier could restrain this rivalry, it would dominate the Abbasid government over the next decades, with the factions alternating in office and often fining and torturing their predecessors to extract money according to a well-established practice known as muṣadara.[13][62][63] In addition, al-Qasim ibn Ubayd Allah was of an altogether different character than his father: soon after his appointment, he plotted to have al-Mu'tadid assassinated, and tried to involve Badr in his scheming. The general rejected his proposals with indignation, but al-Qasim was saved from discovery and execution by the Caliph's sudden death. The vizier then tried to dominate al–Muktafi, moved swiftly to have Badr denounced and executed, and was involved in yet more intrigues against the Banu'l-Furat.[64]

Al-Mu'tadid also completed the return of the capital from Samarra to Baghdad, which had already served as his father's main base of operations. The city's centre, however, was relocated on the eastern bank of the Tigris and further downstream of the original city, where it has remained to this day.[65] As the 10th-century historian al-Mas'udi wrote, the Caliph's two main passions were "women and building" (al-nisaʿ waʿl-banaʿ),[4] and accordingly he engaged in major building activities in the capital: he restored and expanded the Great Mosque of al-Mansur which had fallen into disuse,[66] enlarged the Hasani palace, built the new palaces of Thurayya ("Pleiades") and Firdus ("Paradise"), and began work on the Taj ("Crown") Palace, which was completed under al-Muktafi.[67][68] He also took care to restore the city's irrigation network, cleaning up the silted-up Dujayl canal, paying for it with money from those landowners who stood to profit from it.[65]

In terms of doctrine, al-Mu'tadid from the outset of his reign sided firmly with Sunni traditionalist orthodoxy, forbidding theological works, and abolishing the fiscal department on property in escheat, which Hanbali legal opinion regarded as illegal.[69] At the same time he also tried to maintain good relations with the Alids, to the point of seriously considering ordering the official cursing of Mu'awiya, the first Umayyad caliph and author of the death of Ali; he was only dissuaded at the last moment by his advisers, who feared what unforeseen consequences such an act might have. Al-Mu'tadid also maintained good relations with the breakaway Zaydi imams of Tabaristan, but his pro-Alid stance failed to prevent the establishment of the second Zaydi state in Yemen in 901.[69]

In the dispensation of justice, he was characterized by what F. Malti-Douglas describes as "severity bordering on sadism". While tolerant of error and not above displays of tenderness, when his wrath was aroused he resorted to torture in the most ingenious ways, and had special torture chambers constructed underneath his palace. Chroniclers like al-Mas'udi and the Mamluk historian al-Safadi describe in great detail the tortures inflicted by the Caliph on prisoners, as well as his practice of making an example of them by having them publicly displayed in Baghdad. At the same time, however, they tend to justify his severity as legitimate, in service of the interests of the state. F. Malti-Douglas remarks that when al-Safadi compared al-Mu'tadid with the founder of the Abbasid state, calling him "al-Saffah the Second", this was not only to emphasize his restoration of the Caliphate's fortunes, but also a direct allusion to the meaning of al-Saffah's name, "the Blood-Shedder".[4][70]

Death and legacy

Al-Mu'tadid died at the Hasani palace on 5 April 902, at the age of either 40 or 47. There were rumours that he had been poisoned, but it is more likely that the rigours of his campaigns, coupled with his dissipate life, severely weakened his health. During his final illness, he refused to follow the advice of his physicians, and even kicked one of them to death.[3][71] Al-Mu'tadid was the first Abbasid caliph to be buried within the walls of Baghdad. Like his sons after him, he was buried in the former Tahirid palace in the western part of the city, which was now used by the caliphs as a secondary residence.[72]

According to the Orientalist Karl Vilhelm Zetterstéen, al-Mu'tadid "had inherited his father's gifts as a ruler and was distinguished alike for his economy and his military ability", becoming "one of the greatest of the Abbasids in spite of his strictness and cruelty".[3] Al-Mu'tadid's capable reign is credited with having arrested the Abbasid Caliphate's decline for a while, but his successes were too dependent on the presence of an energetic ruler at the helm, and ultimately his reign "was too short to reverse long-term trends and re-establish Abbasid power on a long-term basis" (Hugh Kennedy).[2]

Al-Mu'tadid had taken care to prepare his son and successor, al-Muktafi, for his role by appointing him as governor in Rayy and the Jazira.[2][73] Although al-Muktafi tried to follow his father's policies, he lacked his energy. The heavily militarized system of al-Muwaffaq and al-Mu'tadid required the Caliph to actively participate in campaigns, setting a personal example and allowing for the formation of ties of loyalty, reinforced by patronage, between the ruler and the soldiers. Al-Muktafi, on the other hand, did not "in his character and comportment [...], being a sedentary figure, instil much loyalty, let alone inspiration, in the soldiers" (Michael Bonner).[74] The Caliphate was still able to secure major successes over the next few years, including the reincorporation of the Tulunid domains in 904 and victories over the Qarmatians, but with al-Muktafi's death in 908, the so-called "Abbasid restoration" passed its high-water mark, and a new period of crisis began.[75][76][77]

Power was now wielded by the senior bureaucrats, who installed the weak and pliable al-Muqtadir on the throne. Over the next decades, the expenditure of both the court and the army increased, while maladministration and strife between military and bureaucratic factions intensified. By 932, when al-Muqtadir was assassinated, the Caliphate was effectively bankrupt, and authority soon devolved on a series of military strongmen who competed for control of the caliph and the title of amir al-umara. This process culminated in the capture of Baghdad in 946 by the Buyids, who put an end to caliphal independence even in name. Thereafter the caliphs remained as symbolic figureheads, but were divested of any military or political authority or independent financial resources.[78][79][80]

References

  1. 1 2 Bowen 1928, p. 25.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Kennedy 1993, pp. 759–760.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 Zetterstéen 1987, p. 777.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Bowen 1928, p. 26.
  5. Kennedy 2001, pp. 148–150.
  6. 1 2 3 4 Bonner 2010, pp. 323–324.
  7. Mottahedeh 1975, pp. 77–78.
  8. Bonner 2010, pp. 313–327.
  9. Kennedy 2001, p. 148.
  10. Bonner 2010, p. 314.
  11. 1 2 Kennedy 2004a, p. 177.
  12. 1 2 Bonner 2010, p. 335.
  13. 1 2 3 Mottahedeh 1975, p. 79.
  14. Kennedy 2001, pp. 151, 156.
  15. Kennedy 2004a, pp. 177–179.
  16. Kennedy 2001, pp. 153–154.
  17. Kennedy 2001, pp. 151, 153–156.
  18. Bonner 2010, p. 324.
  19. Kennedy 2004a, p. 179.
  20. Kennedy 2003, pp. 26–35.
  21. 1 2 3 Sobernheim 1987, p. 973.
  22. Bianquis 1998, pp. 104–105.
  23. Bosworth 1975, pp. 119–120.
  24. 1 2 Kennedy 2001, p. 152.
  25. Bowen 1928, p. 27.
  26. Kennedy 2001, pp. 152–153.
  27. Kennedy 2003, pp. 26, 34.
  28. 1 2 Bonner 2010, p. 332.
  29. Bowen 1928, pp. 25, 27.
  30. 1 2 3 4 Kennedy 2004a, p. 181.
  31. Bianquis 1998, pp. 105–106.
  32. Bianquis 1998, p. 106.
  33. 1 2 3 4 Bonner 2010, p. 336.
  34. Kennedy 2004a, pp. 181–182, 266.
  35. 1 2 Kennedy 2004a, p. 182.
  36. Madelung 1975, pp. 228–229.
  37. Madelung 1975, p. 229.
  38. Treadgold 1997, pp. 461–466.
  39. Treadgold 1997, pp. 466ff..
  40. Kennedy 2004a, pp. 182–183.
  41. Bosworth 1975, p. 120.
  42. Bosworth 1975, pp. 121–122.
  43. Bonner 2010, pp. 336–337.
  44. Bianquis 1998, pp. 106–107.
  45. Bonner 2010, pp. 327–332.
  46. Bonner 2010, p. 327.
  47. Kennedy 2004b, pp. 10–15.
  48. Kennedy 2001, p. 156.
  49. Mottahedeh 1975, p. 80.
  50. 1 2 Kennedy 2004a, p. 187.
  51. Kennedy 2004b, pp. 11–13.
  52. Mottahedeh 1975, p. 87.
  53. Mottahedeh 1975, pp. 79–80, 87.
  54. Malti-Douglas 1999, p. 327.
  55. Bonner 2010, p. 334.
  56. Finer 1999, pp. 706–707.
  57. Talbi 1998, p. 456 (note 313).
  58. Kennedy 2004a, pp. 179–180.
  59. 1 2 Bonner 2010, p. 333.
  60. Bowen 1928, pp. 28–31, 43–45.
  61. Bowen 1928, p. 44.
  62. Bonner 2010, pp. 333–334.
  63. Kennedy 2004a, p. 180.
  64. Bowen 1928, pp. 57ff..
  65. 1 2 Kennedy 2004a, pp. 180–181.
  66. Le Strange 1900, pp. 34–36.
  67. Le Strange 1900, pp. xxx, 242ff..
  68. Bowen 1928, p. 59.
  69. 1 2 Sourdel 1970, p. 132.
  70. Malti-Douglas 1999, pp. 327–334.
  71. Bowen 1928, p. 58.
  72. Le Strange 1900, pp. 120, 194–195 (note 2).
  73. Bonner 2010, p. 337.
  74. Bonner 2010, pp. 332, 335, 337.
  75. Bonner 2010, pp. 337–339.
  76. Kennedy 2004a, pp. 184–185.
  77. Sourdel 1970, pp. 132–134.
  78. Kennedy 2004a, pp. 185–197.
  79. Donner 1999, p. 30.
  80. Sourdel 1970, pp. 134–139.

Sources

Al-Mu'tadid
Born: c. 860 Died: 5 April 902
Sunni Islam titles
Preceded by
al-Mu'tamid
Caliph of Islam
Abbasid Caliph

October 892 – 5 April 902
Succeeded by
al-Muktafi
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