Many unsuccessful
Iraqi and Iranian insurrectionists had fled to Khorasan, in
addition to the 50,000 beduins who had been sent there by
Ziyad. There, at the city of Merv (present-day Mary in the
Soviet Union), a faction that supported Abd al Abbas (a
descendant of the Prophet's uncle), was able to organize the
rebels under the battle cry, "the House of Hashim." Hashim,
the Prophet Muhammad's grandfather, was an ancestor of both
the Shia line and the Abbas line, and the Shias therefore
actively supported the Hashimite leader, Abu Muslim. In 747,
Abu Muslim's army attacked the Umayyads and occupied Iraq.
In 750, Abd al Abbas (not a Shia) was established in Baghdad
as the first caliph of the Abbasid Dynasty. The Abbasids,
whose line was called "the blessed dynasty" by it
supporters, presented themselves to the people as
divine-right rulers who would initiate a new era of justice
and prosperity. Their political policies were, however,
remarkably similar to those of the Umayyads. During the reign
of its first seven caliphs, Baghdad became a center of power
where Arab and Iranian cultures mingled to produce a blaze
of philosophical, scientific, and literary glory. This era
is remembered throughout the Arab world, and by Iraqis in
particular, as the pinnacle of the Islamic past. It was the
second Abbasid caliph, Al Mansur (754-75), who decided to
build a new capital, surrounded by round walls, near the
site of the Sassanid village of city of Baghdad. Within
fifty years the population outgrew the city walls as people
thronged to the capital to become part of the Abbasids'
enormous bureaucracy or to engage in trade. Baghdad became a
vast emporium of trade linking Asia and the Mediterranean.
By the reign of Mansur's grandson, Harun ar Rashid
(786-806), Baghdad was second in size only to
Constantinople. Baghdad was able to feed its enormous
population and to export large quantities of grain because
the political administration had realized the importance of
controlling the flows of the Tigris and the Euphrates
rivers. The Abbasids reconstructed the city's canals, dikes,
and reservoirs , and drained the swamps around Baghdad,
freeing the city of malaria. Harun ar Rashid,
the caliph of the Arabian Nights, actively
supported intellectual pursuits, but the great flowering of
Arabic culture that is credited to the Abbasids reached its
apogee during the reign of his son, Al Mamun (813-33). After
the death of Harun ar Rashid, his sons, Amin and Al Mamun,
quarreled over the succession to the caliphate. Their
dispute soon erupted into civil war. Amin was backed by the
Iraqis, while Al Mamun had the support of the Iranians. Al
Mamun also had the support of the garrison at Khorasan and
thus was able to take Baghdad in 813. Although Sunni
Muslims, the Abbasids had hoped that by astute and stern
rule they would be able to contain Shia resentment at yet
another Sunni dynasty. The Iranians, many of whom were
Shias, had hoped that Al Mamun would make his capital in
their own country, possibly at Merv. Al Mamun, however,
eventually realized that the Iraqi Shias would never
countenance the loss of prestige and economic power if they
no longer had the capital. He decided to center his rule in
Baghdad. Disappointed, the
Iranians began to break away from Abbasid control. A series
of local dynasties appeared: the Tahirids (821- 873), the
Suffarids (867-ca. 1495), and the Samanids (819-1005). The
same process was repeated in the West: Spain broke away in
756, Morocco in 788, Tunisia in 800, and Egypt in 868. In
Iraq there was trouble in the south. In 869, Ali ibn
Muhammad (Ali the Abominable) founded a state of black
slaves known as Zanj. The Zanj brought a large part of
southern Iraq and southwestern Iran under their control and
in the process enslaved many of their former masters. The
Zanj Rebellion was finally put down in 883, but not before
it had caused great suffering. The Sunni-Shia
split had weakened the effectiveness of Islam as a single
unifying force and as a sanction for a single political
authority. Although the intermingling of various linguistic
and cultural groups contributed greatly to the enrichment of
Islamic civilization, it also was a source of great tension
and contributed to the decay of Abbasid power. In addition to
the cleavages between Arabs and Iranians and between Sunnis
and Shias, the growing prominence of Turks in military and
in political affairs gave cause for discontent and rivalry
at court. Nomadic, Turkic-speaking warriors had been moving
out of Central Asia into Transoxiana (i.e., across the Oxus
River) for more than a millennium. The Abbasid caliphs began
importing Turks as slave-warriors (Mamluks) early in the
ninth century. The imperial palace guards of the Abbasids
were Mamluks who were originally commanded by free Iraqi
officers. By 833, however, Mamluks themselves were officers
and gradually, because of their greater military proficiency
and dedication, they began to occupy high positions at
court. The mother of Caliph Mutasim (who came to power in
833) had been a Turkish slave, and her influence was
substantial. By the tenth century, the Turkish commanders,
no longer checked by their Iranian and Arab rivals at court,
were able to appoint and depose caliphs. For the first time,
the political power of the caliphate was fully separated
from its religious function. The Mamluks continued to permit
caliphs to come to power because of the importance of the
office as a symbol for legitimizing claims to
authority. In 945, after
subjugating western Iran, a military family known as the
Buwayhids occupied Baghdad. Shias from the Iranian province
of Daylam south of the Caspian Sea, the Buwayhids continued
to permit Sunni Abbasid caliphs to ascend to the throne. The
humiliation of the caliphate at being manipulated by Shias,
and by Iranian ones at that, was immense. The Buwayhids
were ousted in 1055 by another group of Turkic speakers, the
Seljuks. The Seljuks were the ruling clan of the Kinik group
of the Oghuz (or Ghuzz) Turks, who lived north of the Oxus
River. Their leader, Tughril Beg, turned his warriors first
against the local ruler in Khorasan. He moved south and then
west, conquering but not destroying the cities in his path.
In 1055 the caliph in Baghdad gave Tughril Beg robes, gifts,
and the title, "King of the East." Because the Seljuks were
Sunnis, their rule was welcomed in Baghdad. They treated the
caliphs with respect, but the latter continued to be only
figureheads. There were
several lines of Seljuks. The main line, ruling from
Baghdad, controlled the area from the Bosporus to Chinese
Turkestan until approximately 1155. The Seljuks continued to
expand their territories, but they were content to let
Iraqis and Iranians simply pay tribute while administering
and ruling their own lands. One Seljuk, Malek Shah, extended
Turkish rule to the countries of the eastern Mediterranean,
Asia Minor, and to parts of Arabia. During his rule, Iraq
and Iran enjoyed a cultural and scientific renaissance. This
success is largely attributed to Malek Shah's brilliant
Iranian vizier, Nizam al Mulk, one of the most skillful
administrators in history. An astronomical observatory was
established in which Umar (Omar) Khayyam did much of his
experimentation for a new calendar, and religious schools
were built in all the major towns. Abu Hamid al Ghazali, one
of the greatest Islamic theologians, and other eminent
scholars were brought to the Seljuk capital at Baghdad and
were encouraged and supported in their work.
Library of Congress Country Study
Library of Congress Country Study
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