Abu Abdallah Muhammad VI ibn al-Hasan

{{Short description|Hafsid Sultanate Caliph from 1573 to 1574}}

{{Infobox royalty

|name=Abu Abdallah Muhammad VI ibn al-Hasan

|image=

|caption=

|succession= Caliph of the Hafsid Sultanate

|moretext=

|reign= 1573–1574

|predecessor=Abu al-Abbas Ahmad III

|successor=In 1574, the Hafsid Sultanate has ceased to exist.

|birth_name=

|birth_date=Unknown date

|birth_place=

|death_date=1594

|death_place= Istanbul

|dynasty=Hafsids

|religion=Islam

}}

Abu Abdallah Muhammad VI ibn al-Hasan ({{langx|ar|أبو عبد الله محمد بن الحسن}}) sometimes referred to as “Moulay Muhammad”, was the last Hafsid ruler of Ifriqiya (1573–1574). His brother Moulay Ahmad had been driven from power in 1569 by Uluç Ali and, when the Spanish reconquered Tunis, Ahmad was unwilling to accept their terms for supporting him, preferring instead to remain in exile in Sicily. So the Spanish invasion force under Don John of Austria installed Abu Abdallah Muhammad in his place.{{cite book|author1=Jamil M. Abun-Nasr|author2=Ǧamīl M. Abū al-Naṣr|author3=Abun-Nasr, Jamil Mirʻi Abun-Nasr|title=A History of the Maghrib in the Islamic Period|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jdlKbZ46YYkC&pg=PA169|accessdate=22 February 2021|date=1987-08-20|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-33767-0|page=169}}

Installation

File:Tunis, 1573.jpg

Abu Abdallah Muhammad was unable to prevent the Spaniards who had installed him from sacking the city. Some of the city's inhabitants took refuge in a mosque, but the soldiers went in and killed them. Don John also had the four marble columns in the Zeitouna mosque removed. These actions made Abu Abdallah Muhammad deeply unpopular.{{cite journal |last1=Varriale |first1=Gennaro |title=I CAVALIERI DELL'EMIRO: LA COMUNITÀ REBATTINA SULLE DUE SPONDE DEL MEDITERRANEO |journal=Estudis |date=2010 |volume=36 |page=152 |url=https://www.uv.es/dep235/PUBLICACIONS_IV/E%2036%20Varriale%20133-158.pdf |access-date=25 February 2021}} The 17th century historian :fr:Ibn Abi Dinar recounted the scene:

"The feet of the infidels trampled the schools, all the collections of science were scattered and dissipated in the streets, to such an extent that those passing to the east of the mosque could not pass without trampling them. And bells rang in the medina, and I heard some townspeople saying that the Christians were tying their horses in the Great Mosque."{{cite book|first=Mahmoud |last=Chammam |title=Al Mu'nis fi Akhbar Ifriqya wa Tunis d'Ibn Abi Dinar|publisher=Al Maktaba Al Atika|place=Tunis|date=1967|pages=175–6}}

Muslims were driven out of a Christian-occupied part of the city, and hundreds of refugees crowded the surrounding area. Justice was administered by a tribunal made up of the Christian governor and Abu Abdallah Muhammad.{{cite book|first1=Hans Joachim |last1=Kissling| first2=Frank| last2=Bagley|title=The Last Great Muslim Empires| publisher=Brill|place= Leiden |date=1969 |page=129}}

The Turkish garrison fled Tunis and headed for Bizerte and Kairouan, leaving Abu Abdallah Muhammad as the nominal ruler of little more than Tunis and La Goulette.

Removal from power

{{main|Conquest of Tunis (1574)}}

Ten months after Abu Abdallah Muhammad's installation, a major Ottoman attack was directed at Tunis, led by Sinan Pasha from Tripoli and by Uluç Ali from Algiers. On 15 July 1574 this force landed on the coast of the Gulf of Tunis and quickly took possession of the Spanish fortress of La Goulette. After two months of skirmishes, the Turkish ships entered through the La Goulette canal, and on 3 September the Ottoman armies entered Tunis.{{cite book |last1=Husain |first1=Abu Abdallah |last2=Carletti |first2=J.T. (trans) |title=History of the conquest of Tunis and of the Goletta by the Ottomans A.H. 981 (A.D. 1573) |date=1883 |publisher=Trübner & co. |location=London |pages=16–27 |url=https://archive.org/details/historyconquest00carlgoog/page/n30/mode/2up |access-date=27 February 2021}}

Abu Abdallah Muhammad was twice wounded by musket fire, captured and sent as a captive to Istanbul. There he was generously provided for and confined in the Yedikule Fortress, where he died in 1594.{{cite journal |last1=Kavas |first1=Ahmet|title=OSMANLI DEVLETİ'Nİ KUZEY AFRİKA'DAKALICILAŞTIRAN SEFER: TUNUS SAVAŞI (1574) |journal=Siyasal Bilgiler Fakültesi Dergisi |date=2016 |volume=1 |issue=1 |pages=33, 35 |url=https://studylibtr.com/doc/1732770/tunus-sava%C5%9F%C4%B1--1574- |access-date=22 February 2021}}{{cite book|author1=Luis del Mármol Carvajal|author2=Mika Ben Miled|title=Histoire des derniers rois de Tunis: du malheur des Hafçides, de la prise de Tunis par Charles Quint-- de Kheyr-ed-Din Barberousse, Darghut-- et autres valeureux raïs--|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5Z5WPzRV9DIC&pg=PA164|accessdate=21 February 2021|year=2007|publisher=éditions cartaginoiseries|isbn=978-9973-704-05-4|page=164}}

The end of the Hafsid dynasty

Abu Abdallah Muhammad was the last member of the Hafsid dynasty to rule Ifriqiya. His eldest son Muley Nazar had also lived in Sicily but died during the battle of Tunis. Another of his sons, Muley Abderraman, was in Palermo in 1574 and wished to travel to the court in Madrid to swear fealty to Philip II in his father’s name, but the monarch ordered him to remain where he was. Muley Abderraman did not give up his claim to the throne. He tried to attract partisans in Tunis, taking advantage of a period of Ottoman weakness in the region. In 1594, claiming to be supported by several sheikhs and to have more than sixty thousand followers, he asked the Viceroy of Sicily to provide fifty or sixty galleys for an assault on Tunis but this was not granted to him.{{cite book |last1=Corrales |first1=Eloy Martin |title=Muslims in Spain, 1492-1814 |date=2020 |publisher=Brill |isbn=978-90-04-44376-1 |pages=95–126 |url=https://brill.com/view/book/9789004443761/BP000004.xml |access-date=20 February 2021}}

In 1581 the Spanish made one final attempt to restore the Hafsids. One of the Hafsid refugees in Sicily was Prince Ahmed (known as ‘Hamet’ in Spanish documents), brother of Moulay Hasan. He obtained Spanish support to sail from Palermo with a small band of followers. The Spanish brought him ashore in a remote location in the Gulf of Gabès and sailed away. Hoping to unite the Bedouin tribes against Ottoman rule, he soon found himself abandoned and went into hiding in the interior. He was finally captured at El Djem in 1592 and sent as a captive to Constantinople. The remaining Hafsids in Spanish domains had converted to Christianity and abandoned any hope of returning to Tunis.{{cite news |last1=Ben Achour |first1=Mohamed El-Aziz |title=L'agonie de la dynastie hafside |url=https://www.leaders.com.tn/article/21027-l-agonie-de-la-dynastie-hafside |access-date=27 February 2021 |publisher=Leaders.com.tn |date=20 November 2016}}

Further reading

References