The most critical
problem that faced the young Islamic community revolved
around the rightful successor to the office of caliph.
Uthman, the third caliph, had encountered opposition during
and after his election to the caliphate. Ali ibn Abu Talib,
the Prophet Muhammad's cousin and son-in-law (by virtue of
his marrying the Prophet's only surviving child, Fatima),
had been the other contender. Ali's pietism was
disquieting to certain vested-interest groups, who perceived
the more conservative Uthman as more likely to continue the
policies of the previous caliph, Umar. Discontent increased,
as did Ali's formal opposition to Uthman based on religious
grounds. Ali claimed that innovations had been introduced
that were not consonant with Quranic directives. Economics
was the key factor for most of the members of the
opposition, but this, too, acquired religious
overtones. As a result of
the rapid military expansion of the Islamic movement,
financial troubles beset Uthman. Many beduins had offered
themselves for military service in Iraq and in Egypt. Their
abstemious and hard life contrasted with the leisured life
of Arabs in the Hijaz (the western part of the Arabian
Peninsula), who were enjoying the benefits of conquest. When
these volunteer soldiers questioned the allocation of lands
and the distribution of revenues and pensions, they found a
ready spokesman in Ali. Groups of
malcontents eventually left Iraq and Egypt to seek redress
at Medina in the Hijaz. Uthman promised reforms, but on
their return journey the rebels intercepted a message to the
governor of Egypt commanding that they be punished. In
response, the rebels besieged Uthman in his home in Medina,
eventually slaying him. Uthman's slayer was a Muslim and a
son of the first caliph, Abu Bakr. The Muslim world was
shaken. Ali, who had not taken part in the siege, was chosen
caliph. Two opponents of
Ali enlisted Aisha, a widow of the Prophet Muhammad, to join
them in accusing Ali and demanding retribution for Uthman's
death. When the three went to Iraq to seek support for their
cause, Ali's forces engaged theirs near Basra. Aisha's two
companions were killed, and Ali was clearly victorious.
Muawiyah, a kinsman of Uthman and the governor of Syria,
then refused to recognize Ali, and he demanded the right to
avenge his relative's death. In what was perhaps the most
important battle fought between Muslims, Ali's forces met
Muawiyah's at the Plain of Siffin near the largest bend of
the Euphrates River. Muawiyah's forces, seeing that they
were losing, proposed arbitration. Accordingly, two
arbitrators were chosen to decide whether Uthman's death had
been deserved. Such a decision would give his slayer status
as an executioner rather than as a murderer and would remove
the claims of Uthman's relatives. When the arbitrators
decided against Ali, he protested that the verdict was not
in accordance with sharia (Islamic law) and declared his
intention to resume the battle. Ali's decision,
however, came too late for the more extreme of his
followers. Citing the Quranic injunction to fight rebels
until they obey, these followers insisted that Ali was
morally wrong to submit to arbitration. In doing so, they
claimed, he bowed to the judgment of men--as opposed to the
judgment of God that would have been revealed by the outcome
of the battle. These dissenters, known as Kharajites (from
the verb kharaja--to go out), withdrew from battle,
an action that had far-reaching political effects on the
Islamic community in the centuries ahead. Before resuming
his dispute with Muawiyah, Ali appealed to the Kharajites;
when they rejected the appeal, he massacred many of them.
Furious at his treatment of pious Muslims, most of Ali's
forces deserted him. He was forced to return to Al
Kufah--about 150 kilometers south of Baghdad--and to await
developments within the Islamic community. A number of
Islamic leaders met at Adruh in present-day Jordan, and the
same two arbitrators from Siffin devised a solution to the
succession problem. At last it was announced that neither
Ali nor Muawiyah should be caliph; Abd Allah, a son of Umar,
was proposed. The meeting terminated in confusion, however,
and no final decision was reached. Both Ali and Muawiyah
bided their time in their separate governorships: Muawiyah,
who had been declared caliph by some of his supporters, in
newly conquered Egypt, and Ali, in Iraq. Muawiyah fomented
discontent among those only partially committed to Ali.
While praying in a mosque at Al Kufah, Ali was murdered by a
Kharajite in 661. The ambitious Muawiyah induced Ali's
eldest son, Hasan, to renounce his claim to the caliphate.
Hasan died shortly thereafter, probably of consumption, but
the Shias
(see Glossary) later claimed that he had been poisoned and
dubbed him "Lord of All Martyrs." Ali's unnatural death
ensured the future of the Shia movement--Ali's followers
returned to his cause--and quickened its momentum. With the
single exception of the Prophet Muhammad, no man has had a
greater impact on Islamic history. The Shia declaration of
faith is: "There is no God but God; Muhammad is his Prophet
and Ali is the Saint of God." Subsequently,
Muawiyah was declared caliph. Thus began the Umayyad
Dynasty, which had its capital at Damascus. Yazid I,
Muawiyah's son and his successor in 680, was unable to
contain the opposition that his strong father had vigorously
quelled. Husayn, Ali's second son, refused to pay homage and
fled to Mecca, where he was asked to lead the Shias--mostly
Iraqis--in a revolt against Yazid I. Ubayd Allah, governor
of Al Kufah, discovered the plot and sent detachments to
dissuade him. At Karbala, in Iraq, Husayn's band of 200 men
and women refused to surrender and finally were cut down by
a force of perhaps 4,000 Umayyad troops. Yazid I received
Husayn's head, and Husayn's death on the tenth of Muharram
(October 10, 680) continues to be observed as a day of
mourning for all Shias. Ali's burial place at An Najaf,
about 130 kilometers south of Baghdad, and Husayn's at
Karbala, about 80 kilometers southwest of Baghdad, are holy
places of pilgrimage for Shias, many of whom feel that a
pilgrimage to both sites is equal to a pilgrimage to
Mecca. The importance of
these events in the history of Islam cannot be
overemphasized. They created the greatest of the Islamic
schisms, between the party of Ali (the Shiat Ali, known in
the West as Shias or Shiites) and the upholders of Muawiyah
(the Ahl as Sunna, the People of the Sunna--those who follow
Muhammad's custom and example) or the Sunnis
(see Glossary). The Sunnis believe they are the followers of
orthodoxy. The ascendancy of the Umayyads and the events at
Karbala, in contrast, led to a Shia Islam which, although
similar to Sunni Islam in its basic tenets, maintains
important doctrinal differences that have had pervasive
effects on the Shia world view. Most notably, Shias have
viewed themselves as the opposition in Islam, the opponents
of privilege and power. They believe that after the death of
Ali and the ascension of the "usurper" Umayyads to the
caliphate, Islam took the wrong path; therefore, obedience
to existing temporal authority is not obligatory.
Furthermore, in sacrificing his own life for a just cause,
Husayn became the archetypal role model who inspired
generations of Shias to fight for social equality and for
economic justice. During his
caliphate, Ali had made Al Kufah his capital. The transfer
of power to Syria and to its capital at Damascus aroused
envy among Iraqis. The desire to regain preeminence prompted
numerous rebellions in Iraq against Umayyad rule.
Consequently, only men of unusual ability were sent to be
governors of Al Basrah and Al Kufah. One of the most able
was Ziyad ibn Abihi, who was initially governor of Al Basrah
and later also of Al Kufah. Ziyad divided the residents of
Al Kufah into four groups (not based on tribal affiliation)
and appointed a leader for each one. He also sent 50,000
beduins to Khorasan (in northeastern Iran), the easternmost
province of the empire, which was within the jurisdiction of
Al Basrah and Al Kufah. The Iraqis once
again became restive when rival claimants for the Umayyad
caliphate waged civil war between 687 and 692. Ibn Yasuf ath
Thaqafi al Hajjaj was sent as provincial governor to restore
order in Iraq in 694. He pacified Iraq and encouraged both
agriculture and education. Arab
Conquest
<<< Contents
>>> Abbasid
Caliphate
Library of Congress Country Study
Library of Congress Country Study
This document is in the public domain. You may copy, download, print and distribute this work as you see fit.Every effort has been made to present this text accurately and cleanly, but no guarantees are made against errors. Neither Melissa Snell nor About.com may be held liable for any problems you experience with the text version or with any electronic form of the document.
