| Mu'awiya's campaigns in Southern Arabia (658–660) | |||||||||
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| Part of First Fitna | |||||||||
| Map of the conflict | |||||||||
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| Belligerents | |||||||||
| Umayyad Caliphate Uthmaniyya | Rashidun Caliphate Pro-Alids | ||||||||
| Commanders and leaders | |||||||||
| Mu'awiya I Yazid ibn Shajara Nu'man ibn Bashir Abd al-Rahman ibn Qubath Ma'n ibn Yazid al-Salami Abd Allah ibn Amir al-Hadhrami † [5] Sufyan ibn Awf Al-Dahhak ibn Qays al-Fihri Busr ibn Abi Artat Abd Allah ibn Mas'ada al-Fazari Zuhayr ibn Makhul Habib ibn Maslama al-Fihri | Ali ibn Abi Talib Al-Musayyib ibn Najaba Ziyad ibn Abihi Ayan ibn Dahi'ah † Ashras ibn Hassan al-Bakri † Adi ibn Hatim Kumayl ibn Ziyad Hujr ibn Adi Qutham ibn Abbas Malik ibn Ka'ab Sa'id ibn Qays al-Hamdani Abu Ayyub al-Ansari Ubayd Allah ibn Abbas Abu Karib al-Hamdani † Jariya ibn Qudama Shabib ibn Amir | ||||||||
| Strength | |||||||||
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| Casualties and losses | |||||||||
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| According to Shi'ite sources, 30,000+ Alid civilans killed during Busr's expedition to Hejaz and Yemen (likely exaggerated) [9] | |||||||||
Mu'awiya I's Southern Campaigns were a series of raids and military expeditions of Umayyad forces onto Hejaz, Yemen and Iraq after the failure of the arbitration talks following the Battle of Siffin. The campaigns against the Caliphate of Ali continued until the truce between Ali and Mu'awiya in 660.
After the Assassination of Uthman, the third Rashidun Caliph, disputes arose within the early Muslim community regarding his succession. Ali ibn Abi Talib was chosen in Medina to succeed Uthman as the fourth Rashidun Caliph, but this was refused by Uthman's kinsman and the long-time governor of Syria, Mu'awiya ibn Abi Sufyan, which contributed to the outbreak of the First Fitna. Hostilities resumed between Mu'awiya and Ali following the failure of arbitration talks. Subsequently, Mu'awiya sent Amr ibn al-As to take control of Egypt, where he was successful. Mu'awiya also dispatched his lieutenant commanders to order raids against Ali's strongholds in Iraq and Arabia.
Mu'awiya sent Yazid ibn Shajara, a pious Uthmanid, to secure the pledge of allegiance from the Quraysh tribe of Mecca in the early 660s, but the mission proved to be a failure. He was given an army of 3,000 soldiers, who were not informed about the objective of the expedition. Yazid refused to shed blood in the Islamic holy land, although Mu'awiya stated that removing the governor of Mecca (whom he considered to be a participant in the killing of Uthman) was a pious act. [10] [11] Later that year, Mu'awiya appointed Busr ibn Abi Artat in his plans to subjugate the Hejaz and Yemen regions.
When Mu'awiya dispatched Yazid ibn Shajara, he also sent Al-Harith ibn Nimr Al-Tanukhi to the Al-Jazira region to assert his authority by taking captive those loyal to Ali. Al-Harith took seven men from Daraa who had defected from Ali to Mu'awiya. They asked Mu'awiya to release their companions, but Mu'awiya rejected their request, and they consequently defected from him as well. Mu'awiya wrote to Ali to ransom them with a man that Mu'aqqal ibn Qais had captured from the companions of Yazid bin Shajara. Ali sent them to Mu'awiya, and Mu'awiya released those men. Ali sent Abd al-Rahman al-Khathami to pacify the region of Mosul. The defectors of the Taghlib tribe encountered Abd al-Rahman and killed him. Ali was prepared to send troops against the defectors, however, on the request of the Rabi'a tribe, who stated the killing of Abd al-Rahman as a mistake, Ali refrained from doing so. [12] [13]
Mu'awiya made an attempt to attain zakat from the neutral tribes of the region by dispatching Muslim ibn Uqba to collect it. However, their refusal led Ibn Uqba to besiege them, which Ali responded to by sending Malik ibn Ka'ab with 1000 cavalry to confront the Syrians. The battle was indecisive, and the Syrians retreated the next day. [14] [15]
Mu'awiya dispatched Abdullah ibn Mas'ada to Medina and Mecca with 1,700 troops. Learning about this, Ali sent Al Musayyab with 2,000 troops to counter him. The two forces skirmishes and Ibn Mas'ada was nearly captured, but he evaded capture, escaping to the fortress at Tayma which was besieged for three days by Al Musayyab. The camels of Ibn Mas'ada's men were slaughtered by the tribesmen. Firewood was piled up at the fortress gates and set alight. Ibn Mas'ada's men pleaded for mercy on the basis of tribal affiliations and the fire was extinguished. When Musayyab pulled back his forces, Ibn Mas'ada and his forces escaped to Syria under the cover of nightfall. A plan for pursuit was devised but Musayyab refused to pursue the escapees. For this act, Musayyab was demoted to alms collector, following a few days of imprisonment. [16] [17] [18] [19]
Amr ibn al-As provided Busr ibn Abi Artat with 3000 Syrian troops for his expedition. The Qaysi nobility warned Mu'awiya of the possible vengeance that Busr might exact on them in retaliation to the killings of Fihr and Kinana by Qaysi Banu Sulaym during the Conquest of Mecca, leading to Mu'awiya to strip Busr of authority over Qaysi tribesmen under his command. At Deir Murran, he dropped 400 troops out of his campaign and continued his expedition with 2600 soldiers. [20] [21]
When Busr arrived in Medina, which was his primary target as it had been the capital of the caliphate before Ali relocated it to Kufa, he faced no resistance while delivering a speech condemning the Ansar, the traditional elites of Medina. Ali's governor of Medina, Abu Ayyub al-Ansari fled to Kufa. Busr halted at every watering place along his route and requested to use the camels of the locals when his soldiers were exhausted, in order to preserve the stamina of his war horses. He demolished the houses of Ali’s allies, including Abu Ayyub’s, and obtained the pledge of allegiance to Mu'awiya from the city’s notables, sparing its inhabitants. [22] [23]
After Medina, Busr headed towards Mecca, Ali's governor of city, Qutham ibn Abbas fled with a large number of its inhabitants. Busr located the representative of Ali in the arbitration talks and a companion of Muhammad, Abu Musa al-Ash'ari, and pardoned him. After praying at the Ka'ba, Busr took pledges of allegiance to Mu'awiya from the inhabitants except from Sa'id ibn al-As, a distant kinsman of Mu'awiya. Qutham might have taken the control of Mecca after the departure of Busr from the city. [23] [24]
Al-Mughira ibn Shu'ba, one of the notables of Taif, greeted Busr when he had arrived at the city and persuaded him not to attack the Banu Thaqif. The representatives of Taif had also informed Busr that he had no authority over the core clan of Qays. Busr spared the inhabitants, while dispatching troops to Tabala against the partisans of Ali ibn Abi Talib, but ultimately pardoned them. After leaving Taif, Busr entered the tribal territory of the Kinana, where he came across Abd al-Rahman and Qutham, the young sons of Ubayd Allah ibn Abbas, governor of Yemen and Ali's cousin. Busr executed both Abd al-Rahman and Qutham. [25] [26] [27]
After the death of Muhammad ibn Abi Bakr, Mu'awiya dispatched Abd Allah ibn Amir al-Hadhrami with 2,000 men to Basra to persuade its people, particularly the Banu Tamim to join the Umayyads. [28] At the time, the governor of the city, ʿAbdullah ibn ʿAbbas, had gone to Kufa, leaving Ziyad ibn Abihi as his deputy. Ziyad informed Ali about the deteriorating situation in the city. Forced to flee, Ziyad took refuge with the tribe of Azd. Ali dispatched the Banu Tamim of Kufa under the command of Aʿyan ibn Dahiʿah al-Mujashiʿ to confront al-Hadhrami, but al-Mujashiʿ was killed shortly after arriving in Basra. Ali then sent Jariyah ibn Qudamah al-Saʿdi with a relief force of fifty men from the Banu Tamim. However, the tribesmen soon began fighting amongst themselves. Jariyah then called upon his deputy Ziyad and the Azd tribe for assistance. They arrived and skirmished with al-Hadhrami, forcing him to retreat and take shelter in the house of Sabil al-Saʿdi. The house was set on fire, killing most of the men inside. Those who escaped were cut down by the besieging forces. [29] [30] [31]
Mu'awiya sent Zuhayr ibn Makhul, to collect alms taxes from the Banu Kalb tribe who were neutral in the conflict but had a marriage alliance with Mu'awiya through his wife Maysun, daughter of the Kalbite chieftain Bahdal ibn Unayf. In response Ali sent Jafar, Al Julas and Urwa. They met Zuhayr and fought him. Jafar was killed by Zuhayr, Al Julas fled to Kufa, while Urwa was criticized and whipped by Ali for what he denounced as Urwa's cowardice. Urwa then defected to Mu'awiya and his house was destroyed by Ali in retaliation. This skirmish bought minor success for the Umayyads. [14] [32]
Al-Dahhak ibn Qays al-Fihri raided Al-Qutqutana, killing Ibn Umays. Ali asked the Kufans to rise up against the Syrian invasion force. Hujr ibn Adi rose up first, following which 4,000 more people volunteered and set out to confront the attackers. They clashed with Al-Dahhak's forces in Palmyra, forcing Al-Dahhak to retreat, after which raids continued for two more days. In the same year, Mu'awiya himself marched up to the Tigris River but later retreated. [14] [33] [34]
Mu'awiya dispatched Al-Nu'man ibn Bashir with 2,000 troops to raid the garrison of Ayn Al-Tamr, which was stationed by Malik ibn Ka'ab Al-Arabi and his men. Ali asked the Kufans to respond to their assault, but their slow response prompted Ali to encourage the Kufans in a sermon to retaliate against the Syrians. Following this, Adi ibn Hatim went to Ali, offering 1,000 troops at his disposal. Adi, along with his 1,000 troops, under orders from Ali, went to al-Nukhayla and then from there, raided Syrian territory while moving along the Euphrates River. [35] [36] [37]
In 659, Mu'awiya launched raids against Anbar and Ctesiphon. [38] Mu'awiya sent Sufyan ibn Awf to Hit with 6,000 men and with orders to continue to Al Anbar and Al-Mada'in. In Hit, there was no confrontation, but in Anbar, they attacked Ali's garrison of 500 men, routing around 400, while 100 soldiers remained. Cavalry and infantry attacks killed the garrison commander Ashras ibn Hassan Al Bakri and 30 men, while the garrison was looted. Ali sent Sa'id ibn Qays al-Hamdani to confront him, who went as far as Anat to pursue the raiders but was not able to engage them. [33] [39]
Mu'awiya wanted to overthrow Shabath ibn Rib'i, the governor of Qarqisiya, who had marched to the outskirts of Qarqisiya to meet a force of Syrians who he had heard had decided to attack Hit. He said, "Beat them first before they attack me, for it is said: 'Beat them with a shout and they will flee'". Kumayl left one man in Hit and marched with all his companions. When the Umayyad army approached them, the 50 men stationed in Hit fled. Ali became angry and wrote to him, "For a man to neglect what he has been entrusted with and to undertake what is sufficient is weakness, but your abandoning your work and skipping it to Qarqisiya is a mistake, ignorance, and a false opinion." Mu'awiya launched continuous attacks on Qarqisiya. Then Kumayl received a letter from Shabib ibn Amir al-Azdi from Nasibin, informing him that a spy had informed him that Mu'awiya had sent Abd al-Rahman ibn Qubath ibn Ashim toward al-Jazira, and that it was not known whether he was heading to Hit or the Euphrates region. Kumayl consulted his companions and said, "If Ibn Qubath wants us, we will meet him, and if he wants our brothers in Nasibin, we will intercept him." He set out with 400 horsemen, leaving his 600 men in Hit, and began to cut off the enemy. Later Kumayl delegated Abdullah ibn Wahb al-Rasibi in charge over Hit, while he went to combine his forces with Shabib in Nasibin. Shabib set out with 600 horsemen, and together they gathered 1000 horsemen and marched towards Abd al-Rahman ibn Qabath, who was at that time in Kirkeesya with a sizeable armed force from Syria. Kumayl ibn Ziyad and Shabib al-Azdi overtook the cavalry of the Syrians. The Umayyad army was led by Abd al-Rahman ibn Qubath and Ma'n ibn Yazid al-Salami, and their numbers were estimated to be 2400 men. When the two armies met, they clashed and fought fiercely, ending with the defeat of the Syrian army and a large number of casualties, while four of Shabib's companions were killed, and two men from Kumayl's army were killed: Abdullah ibn Qays al-Qabisi and Mudrik ibn Bishr al-Ghanawi. After the Syrian army was repulsed, Kumayl ordered that no one who fled should be pursued and no one who was wounded should be finished off. Kumayl said to his companions: "Do not pursue them, for we have dealt a great deal of harm to them, and if we pursue them, perhaps they will return to us, and we do not know how things will turn out." Kumayl wrote to Ali ibn Abi Talib about his actions for which Ali prayed for him and praised him highly. [40] [41] [42] [43] [44]
When Shabib ibn Amir arrived with 600 horsemen from Nisibis, he found that the Syrians were routed by Kumayl, for which he congratulated him. Shabib went on to pursue the Syrians and he crossed the Euphrates at Manbij, sending his cavalry to attack the region of Baalbek. When Mu'awiya ordered Habib ibn Maslama to confront Shabib, Shabib withdrew and raided the region of Raqqa. He looted cattle, horses and weapons from the city. Ali praised him for the successful raid but instructed him not to loot cattle or personal property except for horses and weaponry. [45] [46]
In 660, Mu'awiya sent Busr ibn Abi Artat of the Banu Amir ibn Lu'ayy for the military campaign in Yemen which was being ruled by Ali's governor Ubayd Allah ibn Abbas. [47] Mu'awiya had imposed sanctions on Busr for his military expeditions in Hejaz but did not place such terms in Yemen. Ka'b ibn Abda Dhi'l-Habaka al-Nahdi was killed by Busr for his previous criticism of Uthman. When he entered Najran, he ordered the killing of Abd Allah ibn Abd al-Madan, who was the leader of an embassy and his brother and son, Yazid and Malik respectively. Casualties in the conflict inflicted by Busr caused Ali to send reinforcements to Yemen and criticise his governors in Yemen for not taking formidable action against the local Uthmanids there. [48] [49] [50] [51]
Busr first attacked the Arhab clan of the Hamdan tribe and killed many loyalists of Ali which included Abu Karib who was a Hamdan chief. The Hamdan people took their positions above the mountains of Shibam and resisted Busr, who then bypassed the mountain and withdrew, however upon the return of the people to the villages, Busr attacked them and captured their women. It was the first ever incidence of Muslims holding Muslim women as captives. [52]
Ali's governors in Yemen, Ubaydallah ibn Abbas and Sa'id ibn Nirman, fled to Kufa despite Sa'id's resistance to Busr's advances in Yemen. Ubaydallah's deputy in Sanaa Amr ibn Araka al-Thaqafi offered resistance to Busr's invasion but was killed by Busr along with many inhabitants. From Ma'rib, a delegation of the town offered to submit to Mu'awiya, they were spared to spread the news of the massacre to Ma'rib. [53]
Busr launched an offensive against Jayshan, where the support for Ali was strong. Many partisans of Ali were killed and were forced to withdraw to their forts, before retreating to Sanaa. [52]
Wa'il ibn Hujr invited Busr to Hadhramaut stating that half of the city was Uthmanid. Busr accepted the offer and was rejoiced by gifts, however upon Wa'il's query of Busr's intentions with the civilian population of the city, Busr replied that he intended to massacre a quarter of the city. Wa'il re-directed him to attack Abdallah ibn Thawaba, a lord of Hadhramaut and Wa'il's rival. Busr executed Thawaba soon after. [52]
Busr ended his expedition of Hadhramaut upon the news of a relief army sent by Ali and commanded by Jariya ibn Qudama and Wahab ibn Masud, consisting of 4000 troops. Busr retreated to Hejaz without confronting the relief army due to Mu'awiya's preference of incurring minimum Syrian casualties. Upon his retreat, Busr did not punish the Banu Tamim who seized parts of his loot. [54]
Busr entered Al-Yamama and decided to punish the chieftain of the Banu Hanifa for his neutrality in the civil war. His tribesmen were spared while the chieftain Mujja'a ibn Murara was killed and his son was taken captive, but who would later be freed by Mu'awiya and made the new chief of the Banu Hanifa tribe. [55]
After the invasion of Busr in Yemen, Jariya quickly approached Yemen with reinforcements, however the Uthmanids in Yemen started to flee upon their arrival and were ultimately persecuted and killed by the Ali's partisans. [56] [57]
According to Shia sources, Busr's campaign was full of atrocities and crimes against Ali's partisans as well the civilian populations in Hejaz and Yemen, including the first ever capture of Muslim women by Muslims and large-scale massacres of civilians throughout Yemen. Busr executed several notable Alid figures in Hejaz and punished tribes for either their support for Ali or their neutrality. In Taif, Busr is said to have committed a mass execution. [23]
Shia sources state the death toll inflicted by Busr to be around 30,000, however this is considered to be an exaggeration although it is not doubted that the massacres occurred. Along with the Partisans of Ali, Busr also committed atrocities against the civilian population, including the children of the Kinana tribe. Ali had cursed Busr for his actions in the region. [58] [59] [60] [61] [62] [63]
In late 660, an exchange of letters took place between Ali and Mu'awiya where both parties agreed to cease the military assaults and to partition the Caliphate with each side retaining the domains they controlled. This left Mu'awiya in control over the Levant, Egypt and the Jazira whereas Ali would rule over Iraq, Persia and Arabia. [64] According to Abu Ishaq, when both parties refused to acknowledge the other, Mu'awiya wrote to Ali on one condition to which Ali agreed:
If you wish, you may have Iraq while I have Syria. Thus the sword shall be averted from this community and the blood of the Muslims shall not be shed. [65]
— Mu'awiya I, The History of al-Ṭabarī Vol. 17 Page-292
The partition resembled the territorial borders of the Roman and Persian Empires. The truce triggered a reaction from the Kharijites, who set up assassination plots against the leaders of both parties. [66] [67]
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