Hamdan ibn Hamdun

{{Short description|9th-century Taghlibi Arab chieftain}}

Hamdan ibn Hamdun ibn al-Harith al-Taghlibi ({{fl.|868–895}}) was a Taghlibi Arab chieftain in the Jazira, and the patriarch of the Hamdanid dynasty. Alongside other Arab chieftains of the area, he resisted the attempts at re-imposition of Abbasid control over the Jazira in the 880s, and joined the Kharijite Rebellion. He was finally defeated and captured by Caliph al-Mu'tadid in 895, but was later released as a reward for the distinguished services of his son Husayn to the Caliph.

Life

File:Hamdanid family tree.svg

His family belonged to the Banu Taghlib tribe, established in the Jazira since before the Muslim conquests. The tribe was particularly strong in the region of Mosul, and came to dominate the area during the decade-long Anarchy at Samarra (861–870), when the Taghlibi leaders took advantage of the collapse of the authority of the central Abbasid government to assert their autonomy.{{sfn|Kennedy|2004|pp=265–266}} Hamdan himself appears for the first time in 868, fighting alongside other Taghlibis against the Kharijite Rebellion in the Jazira.{{sfn|Canard|1971|p=126}}

In 879, however, the Abbasid government, in an effort to restore its control, replaced the succession of Tahglibi chieftains as governors of Mosul by a Turkish commander, Ishaq ibn Kundajiq. This prompted the defection of the Taghlib chiefs, including Hamdan ibn Hamdun, to the Kharijite rebels.{{sfn|Canard|1971|p=126}}{{sfn|Kennedy|2004|p=266}} Hamdan became a prominent leader in the rebellion; thus he is mentioned—with the Kharijite sobriquet of "al-Shari"—among the Kharijite and Arab tribal leaders in the great victory won by Ibn Kundajiq in April/May 881, when the rebel army was routed and pursued to Nisibis and Amid.{{sfn|Canard|1971|p=126}}{{sfn|Fields|1987|p=50}}

File:Al-Jazira.svg (Upper Mesopotamia)]]

In 892, a new Caliph, al-Mu'tadid, took the throne, determined to restore Abbasid control over the Jazira. In a series of campaigns, he achieved the submission of most local potentates, but Hamdan offered tenacious opposition. Holding the fortresses of Maridin and Ardamusht (near modern Cizre), and allied with the Kurdish tribes of the mountains north of the Jaziran plain, he held out until 895. In that year, the Caliph took first Mardin and then Ardamusht, which was yielded by Hamdan's son Husayn. Hamdan fled before the caliphal army, but after an "epic chase" (H. Kennedy), finally gave up and surrendered himself at Mosul and was thrown in prison.{{sfn|Canard|1971|p=126}}{{sfn|Kennedy|2004|p=266}}

As H. Kennedy comments, "this surrender might have seemed the end of the family fortunes as it was for other local leaders in the area", but Hamdan's son Husayn managed to preserve the family's fortunes. Husayn entered the Caliph's service and was instrumental in ending the Kharijite Rebellion and capturing its leader, Harun al-Shari. He was rewarded by the grateful Mu'tadid with a pardon for his father and the right to raise and command his own corps of Taghlibi horse, which he led on several expeditions over the next few years, becoming one of the Caliphate's most prominent commanders. His influence enabled him to become, in Kennedy's description, the "intermediary between government and the Arabs and Kurds of the Jazira", thereby cementing the family's dominance in the area and laying the foundation for the rise of the Hamdanid dynasty to power under his two grandsons, Nasir al-Dawla and Sayf al-Dawla.{{sfn|Canard|1971|pp=126ff.}}{{sfn|Kennedy|2004|pp=266ff.}}

References

{{reflist|2}}

Sources

  • {{EI2 | volume = 3 | title=Ḥamdānids | first = Marius | last = Canard | authorlink = Marius Canard | pages = 126–131 | doi =10.1163/1573-3912_islam_COM_0259}}
  • {{The History of al-Tabari | volume = 37 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=igltYwUE764C}}
  • {{cite book | title=The Prophet and the Age of the Caliphates: The Islamic Near East from the 6th to the 11th Century | edition = Second | last=Kennedy| first=Hugh N. | author-link=Hugh N. Kennedy | year=2004 | publisher=Pearson Education Ltd. | location=Harlow, UK |isbn=978-0-582-40525-7 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=Wux0lWbxs1kC }}

{{Hamdanid dynasty}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Hamdan ibn Hamdun}}

Category:9th-century births

Hamdam

Category:Kharijites

Category:Generals of the medieval Islamic world

Category:9th-century people from the Abbasid Caliphate

Category:Rebels from the Abbasid Caliphate

Category:Arab generals

Category:Year of birth unknown

Category:Year of death unknown

Category:Prisoners and detainees of the Abbasid Caliphate

Category:9th-century Arab people

Category:Upper Mesopotamia under the Abbasid Caliphate