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The Caliphate: Its Rise, Decline, and Fall - From Original Sources [Chapter 65]
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CHAPTER LXV
AL-AMIN AT BAGDAD; AL-MA'MUN AT MERV
193-198 A.H. / 808-813 A.D.
Breach between Amin and Ma'mun, 193 A.H. 809 A.D.
IN his unwise division of the kingdom, Harun left a fatal legacy that was
not long in bearing bitter fruit. Al-Amin, as occupying Bagdad, the seat
of empire, had the advantage of Al-Ma'mun. In anticipation of his father's
end, he had deputed an agent to the camp at Tus, with letters to be kept
hid until the event. Immediately on Harun's death, they were produced.
In one Al-Ma'mun, then at Merv, was bidden to have oaths of allegiance
sworn to both the brothers, in accordance with their father's will. But
a second, in direct contravention of that will, ordered the army with
its munitions of war, to return at once to Bagdad. On hearing of this,
Al-Ma'mun sent messengers from Merv to expostulate against this violent
breach of distinct conditions to which all had taken solemn oath; but
the troops were already well on their way, hurrying too gladly homewards
to heed the appeal. On their return to Bagdad, Al-Amin signalised his
accession by distributing a year's pay to the army, which he had thus
against his father's covenant stolen away from Al-Ma'mun.
Ma'mun's administration in the East.
The relations between the brothers were thus from the first strained.
Al-Ma'mun, guided by an able adviser, a converted Zoroastrian, Al-Fadl
ibn Sahl, temporised. This man, as a recent Persian convert and protégé
of the Barmekids, was well fitted to secure a stable and popular rule
throughout the East for Al-Ma'mun, who was now its rightful Sovereign.
Under his guidance all classes were conciliated, both the Arabs settled
tribally
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in great numbers in and around Merv, and also the Turkish chiefs and
princes, from whom a fourth of their tribute was now forgiven.
Ma'mun Caliph of East, with Ibn Sahl Prime Minister, 196 A.H. 812 A.D.
Al-Ma'mun's mother was of Persian blood, a fortunate relation that commended
him to the affections of the people. "Son of our sister," they said,
"he is one of ourselves, and an 'Abbasid to boot." As the breach with his
brother widened, he assumed the title of Caliph, making Al-Fadl his Prime
minister, both civil and military, whose rule ran from Hamadan to Thibet, from
the Caspian to the Persian Gulf.1
Meanwhile peace was restored throughout Khorasan. Harthama after a long siege
took Samarkand, and Rafi' hearing of Al-Ma'mun's benign administration,
threw himself on his mercy and was pardoned.
Strained relations between Amin and Ma'mun.
Al-Amin, on the other hand, was a weak voluptuary led at will by those
about him. His Wazir was another Al-Fadl, Ibn ar-Rabi', who having been
Chief minister with Harun at Tus was party to what took place there upon
his death. In consequence he dreaded the vengeance of Al-Ma'mun should
he ever come to power, and persuaded Al-Amin to proclaim that his son's
name should have precedence of Al-Ma'mun's in the public prayers.
Al-Ma'mun retaliated by dropping from the weekly Service all mention of
Al-Amin, and by effectually closing every avenue of communication with
Bagdad.
Amin deposes Ma'man, 194-195 A.H. 810 A.D.
At last Al-Amin took the fatal step of declaring his brother altogether
deposed from the succession, and his own son heir-apparent. Of a piece
with this high-handed act, be sent to the Ka'ba for the two documents,
solemnly suspended by his father within the sacred walls, and tore them
in shreds.
His dissipated character.
Surrounded by eunuchs and women, he passed his time in revelry and dissipation.
Songstresses and slave-girls, gathered for their beauty from all parts of
the empire and arrayed in splendid jewelry, were the chief society of himself
and his boon companions. For his fêtes on the Tigris he had five
gondolas, in the shapes of lion, elephant, eagle, serpent, and horse.
Besides the private carousals in which he made no secret of drinking wine,
his festivities were of the most sumptuous kind. For one of these he had
the banquet-hall decked out with
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gorgeous carpets, couches, and trappings; a hundred songstresses sang in
unison before him, then breaking into companies of ten, and with palm-branches
in their hands, each group advanced in turn and sang before him. But on this
occasion his wayward fancy took the songs as of evil omen, and he had the hall
dismantled and destroyed. Such revels, with music, dancing, and wine, were
peculiarly obnoxious to Muslim sentiment; and our annalist (who seldom indulges
in any such comment) remarks "We find of him no good thing to say."
Still Al-Amin was a favourite at Bagdad, a city already demoralised by a long
course of sensuous living; and he was popular there, partly because of the money
which he lavished on the troops and populace, and partly also because, while
Al-Ma'mun was dreaded for his Persian proclivities, Al-Amin represented the
Western sentiment that ruled in the Capital of Islam.
Amin's generals beaten by Tahir, who advances on 'Irak, 195 A.H. 811 A.D.
When Al-Amin found that his unjust pretensions were ignored at Merv, he resolved
on reducing Al-Ma'mun by force of arms; but from beginning to end he was unfortunate
in his commanders. The first was 'Ali ibn 'Isa, hated in the East for his tyranny,
and deposed, as we have seen, on that account with indignity by Harun. He was
now despatched with 50,000 men, and met with no opposition till he reached Ar-Reiy.
There lay Tahir, posted by Al-Ma'mun with a small force to watch the frontier,
who disdaining to wait for reinforcement, gave battle at once. 'Ali was slain
in single combat by a blow from Tahir's left hand, for he wielded arms equally
well with both hands; and the Caliph's army fled.1
This Tahir, of Persian descent, the wise and brave founder of the Tahirid house,
was well chosen for the attack which Al-Ma'mun now ordered on Bagdad. On his
march to Holwan successive armies were sent by Al-Amin against him, but he defeated
them all. Harthama, despatched
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with heavy reinforcements from Merv, was left in charge of Holwan by Tahir, who
now advanced upon Al-Ahwaz and Sus, and from thence threatened the Capital itself.
Amin's evil courses.
Al-Fadl ibn ar-Rabi' sought to rouse Al-Amin to a sense of the crisis, but
the voluptuous monarch, immersed in pleasure, gave a readier ear to the auspicious
presages of the creatures around him, and to the fond omens of his maidens and eunuchs.
Chafing under repeated defeat, he confiscated the estate of Al-Ma'mun, including
the million of pieces given him by his father. Some even advised him to put Al-Ma'mun's
two sons left at Bagdad to death, but he had still the virtue left to frown on the proposal.
Rebellion in Syria, end of 195 A.H.
Meanwhile a new danger threatened in Syria. A pretender, claiming in his person
descent at once from the houses of 'Ali and of Mu'awiya,sires that had contended
for the Caliphate on the field of Siffin,gained possession of Damascus and
the surrounding country, and made such progress that he might indeed have founded
a new dynasty in the west, had not the miserable jealousies, between the Yemen and
Modar tribes, set up a rival against him. Troops were sent to quell the rebellion,
but so long as misrule reigned at the Capital, nothing effectual could be done; and
so for two or three years Syria was the scene of anarchy. One of the commanders of
the Caliph's Syrian army was Al-Hosein, the son of 'Ali ibn 'Isa slain by Tahir,an
ill-conditioned man who alienated the Syrian troops by his partiality for the men
of Khorasan. This officer suddenly returned with his army to Bagdad.
Hosein a Syrian officer, deposes Amin, 196 A.H. 812 A.D.,
Summoned on his arrival at midnight by Al-Amin, he sent back the insolent reply
that being neither jester nor musician, it was not his wont to appear by night,
but that he would do so in the morning. His object, however, was to dethrone Al-Amin.
By daylight he had raised the malcontents of the city, whose only safety lay in
anticipating the certain victory of Al-Ma'mun. Al-Hosein then crossed the river,
and dispersing the Caliph's guards, seized both him and his mother1
and imprisoned them in one of the palaces. He then proclaimed Al-Ma'mun as Caliph.
But at heart Bagdad hated the Khorasanis.
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Al-Hosein had moreover no money wherewith to gain over either the mob or the soldiery;
and the leading men dreaded the advent of Al-Ma'mun.
but is taken prisoner,
And so it came to pass that in a few days a counter-force was mustered against
Al-Hosein, who was taken prisoner and brought before Al-Amin, now reinstated in
the Caliphate. The weak monarch not only pardoned Al-Hosein, but gave him a new
command to proceed to Holwan against Al-Ma'mun. But as he crossed the bridge,
the people following hooted at him, and he fled.
and slain.
He was pursued by order of the Caliph, overtaken a short way from the city, and
slain. Ibn ar-Rabi', the Wazir, who had assisted Al-Hosein in this singular outbreak,
retired from the Court and went into close hiding.
Advance of Tahir, 196 A.H. 812 A.D.
Meanwhile Tahir was steadily advancing. Column after column was despatched against
him by Al-Amin; but they had little power to stay the tide of conquest. The provinces
east of the Tigris had already sent in their adhesion to Tahir at Al-Ahwaz; and now
all Arabia, with the Holy cities, came over and swore allegiance to Al-Ma'mun. The
governor of Mecca, a descendant of the house of 'Ali, denounced in public the iniquity
and sacrilege of Al-Amin in destroying the documents suspended in the Ka'ba; then
proceeding to Merv, he was honourably received by Al-Ma'mun, always favourable to
that house, and sent back with splendid gifts. At last Tahir crossed the Tigris
by Al-Medain, almost within sight of Bagdad, and captured Wasit. Al-Kufa, seeing
no alternative, now accepted Al-Ma'mun; and Mesopotamia from Al-Basra to Mosul
followed suit. The wretched Capital alone remained. Al-Amin sought to bribe his
followers to fight, and those of the enemy to desert, by money cast lavishly amongst them.
Tahir and Harthama before Bagdad, xii. 196 A.H. August, 812 A.D.
But all in vain. Before the close of the year Tahir, ready to bombard the city,
planted his camp before the Anbar gate. Harthama, similarly approaching from
the east, sat down outside the quarter on the other bank of the river.
Siege and sufferings of Bagdad, 197 A.H. 812-813 A.D.
The sufferings of Bagdad throughout the siege, which lasted for a whole year, were
terrible beyond description. The struggle was prolonged not only by the advantage
the Capital had in lying on either bank of the river with all its means of transport,
but also by the canals which intersected and protected it. The prisons were broken,
and there was
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riot day and night. Catapults planted all round the walls cast shot into the city,
while streams of Greek fire directed from within against the engines of war, caused
great loss of life without. Hand-to-hand fighting went on in every street, and as
the citizens threw down stones and missiles on the advancing soldiers, Tahir had
to raze to the ground whole quarters for his own protection. The distress of
the inhabitants thus hemmed in, and cut off from all supplies of food, was frightful;
and the suffering of the women and children, heartrending,described by the poets
of the day as drawing "tears of blood" from those who witnessed them. Palaces costing
millions were left in ashes; and the beautiful city, into which the riches of the world
had for fifty years been pouring, became a heap of ruins.
Distress at Bagdad.
As one quarter after another fell into the hands of Tahir, the generals of Al-Amin
began to drop off into his camp. In vain Al-Amin emptied his treasury, and when that
failed melted vessels of gold and silver to gain men for his defence. The populace
held by him; but most of those who had anything still to save went over to the invading
force. Things had gone on thus throughout the year 197 A.H., and the wretched city
was now reduced to the last extremity of distress and want, when Tahir, supported
now by most of Al-Amin's own generals, resolved on the final storm.
City stormed, i. 198 A.H. Sept., 813 A.D.
In concert with these, and with Harthama, who had in Tahir's view been too long
and inactive on the eastern side, the bridges were cut away and the city carried
on every side at the point of the sword.
Amin takes refuge in citadel.
Al-Amin, finding his palace untenable, fled with his mother and children into
the strong citadel which Al-Mansur had built for himself on the brink of the river;
while the inmates of his harim, crowds of eunuchs and damsels, fled hither
and thither in terror for their lives. The citadel was defended by a faithful few,
who planted engines at the gates to keep off attack and here, under shelter of its
battlements, Al-Amin prolonged for two or three days his miserable life.
Evening scene on river bank.
His uncle Ibrabim, one of the few nobles who still held by him, tells us that,
about this time, to relieve the sultry closeness of an autumn evening, Al-Amin
issued from the palace to breathe the fresh air of the river bank, and sent
to call him thither. "I went, and as we sat in a balcony overlooking
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the swift stream, Al-Amin said, How balmy the river air; how calm and
clear the moonbeams playing on the water!1
Then he said, Have ye here any wine? which when they brought
we both drank of it; and after that I sang to him one or two of the songs
he liked. When I had done, he called for the chief songstress and bade her
sing to him. She began with a well-known ode on a pack of bloodhounds.
Starting at the words, he bade her sing something else; and so she warbled
a tearful sonnet on loved ones far away. Out upon thee! he cried:
hast thou nothing else? That song thou wast wont to love,
she said, as she began a third about the fate of monarchies. Begone!
cried the Caliph, swearing angrily at her, and let me see thy face no more!
The startled damsel, as she hasted away in the dim moonlight, stumbled on
a priceless crystal goblet set before Al-Amin, and it broke in pieces. See!
he cried again; all are against me, and the end is near. Hark! didst
thou hear that voice, as if a solemn verse of the Kor'an, from across the river?
We listened it was but the strained imagination: all was still, and we retired
into the citadel."
Amin's attempted fight.
But two courses were now open to Al-Amin;either to surrender, or issuing
forth by night, make a bold dash for Syria. He chose the latter; for there
were yet horses enough in the royal stables, and faithful men to mount them
as his bodyguard.
Amin surrenders.
But Tahir, learning the design, threatened the chief men still waiting on Al-Amin,
that if they did not force him to surrender, he would visit them with condign
punishment. The timid monarch was easily persuaded to exchange the risks of
flight for the prospect of ease and pleasure in banishment. But he resolutely
refused to resign himself into the hands of Tahir, whom as a Persian he stood
in dread of; it was only to Harthama, who promised to be his friend, that
he would surrender. Tahir objected, for this would have implied that Harthama,
and not Tahir, was the conqueror of Bagdad. At last it was arranged that
while Al-Amin gave himself up to Harthama, the sceptre, signet, and royal robes
should be given to Tahir; and so Harthama prepared at once to
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convey the fallen monarch to his camp across the river. Tahir, however, fearing
collusion in reference to the compromise, posted men all round the Citadel;
and Harthama hearing of it bade Al-Amin wait till he could protect him on the
following day. But the unfortunate Monarch could remain no longer in his lonely
palace. Deserted by his followers, he had not even water to quench his thirst;
and he resolved to leave at once. So embracing his two sons, and wiping the
fast-falling tears away with his cloak, he rode down to the river bank, where
Harthama waited in a skiff to carry him across. As he embarked, Harthama kissing
his hands embraced him, and quickly bade them to put off; but they had hardly
left the shore, when Tahir's people attacked the boat with stones and arrows.
It sank; Harthama was barely saved, the boatmen seizing him by the hair of his head.
His death, 24 i. 198 A.H. Sept., 813 A.D.
Al-Amin casting off his clothes, swam to the shore. Naked and shivering with fright,
he was carried to a house, where the following night he was slain by a party
of Persian soldiers. His head after being exposed by Tahir on the battlements,
was sent, together with the emblems of royalty, to Al-Ma'mun.
The victory of Al-Ma'mun over his brother was once more like the overthrow of
the Umeiyads by the 'Abbasids, the victory of the Persians over the Arabs. It was
a fresh stage in the ebb of the tide which had begun to flow nearly two hundred
years before. The troops and people of Bagdad repented now that they had not fought
more bravely for Al-Amin; but that, says our annalist, was because of the treasure
he used to lavish on them.
An inglorious reign.
Indeed there was little more that could be said to favour him. His troubled and
inglorious reign lasted four years and eight months.
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