返回总目录
The Caliphate: Its Rise, Decline, and Fall - From Original Sources [Chapter 8]
46
CHAPTER VIII
CAMPAIGN IN CHALDÆA
12 AH. / 633 AD.
Collision with border tribes led to conflict with Greek and Persian empires.
CHALDÆA and southern Syria belong properly to Arabia.
The tribes inhabiting this region, partly heathen but chiefly (at least
in name) Christian, formed an integral of the Arab race and as such
fell within the immediate scope of the new Dispensation. When, however,
these came into collision with the Muslim columns on the frontier, they
were supported by their respective sovereigns,the western by the
Kaiser, and the eastern by the Chosroes. Thus the struggle widened,
and Islam was brought presently face to face in mortal conflict with
the two great Powers of the East and of the West.
History dependent on Arabian sources.
It is important, especially in the early part of this history, for the student
to bear in mind that Arabian sources are practically all he has to guide
him here. Byzantine annals disappear in the impending cataclysm; and it
is many long years before any considerable help is available from western
chronicles. The Persian Empire again was altogether swallowed up in the
invasion of the Arabs, and consequently it is from the conquerors alone
that we learn the events about to be told regarding it. Thus, both for east
and West, we are almost entirely dependent on Arabian tradition, which
itself at the first is but brief and fragmentary and moreover being entirely
one-sided, we are left as best we can to draw a narrative just and impartial
to all concerned.
Position of Greek and Persian empires.
In neither of the great Powers which Abu Bekr was about to try
conclusions with, had the nerve and virtue of earlier days survived.
Luxury, corruption and oppression,
47
religious strife and military disaster, had impaired their vigour and
undermined their strength. Barbarous hordes overrunning the Western
Empire, had wrested the farther provinces from Byzantine rule. Between
the Kaiser and the Chosroes again, war had long prevailed, Syria and
Mesopotamia, scenes of the coming warfare, being the prize, now of one,
now of the other. By the last turn of fortune, Heraclius, marching from
the Black Sea, had routed the Persians on the field of Nineveh, and
advanced triumphantly to the very gates of the enemy's capital.
6 A.H., 627 A.D.
Siroes, after putting to death his father and eighteen brothers, enjoyed
but a few months the fruits of his patricidal crime; and (as we are told by
Gibbon) "in the space of four years, the royal title was assumed by nine
candidates, who disputed, with the sword or dagger, the fragments of an
exhausted monarchy." Such was the condition of Persia, its Court imbecile
and anarchy rampant, at the time when Abu Bekr was engaged in his struggle
with the apostate tribes. Nevertheless, the Arabian armies met with a fiercer
and more protracted opposition on the Persian than on the Syrian side.
And the reason is that Islam aimed its blow at the very heart of Persia.
Constantinople might remain, with Syria gone, ignobly safe. But if the
Arabs gained Al- 'Irak, Ctesiphon (Al-Medain) close at hand, must fall,
and Persia with it. To this quarter attention will be now directed.
Muthanna attacks Chaldæa.
Among the chiefs who helped to reclaim Al-Bahrein, Al Muthanna has
been already named. Advancing along the Persian Gulf, he reduced
Al-Katif, and carried his victorious arms into the delta of the Euphrates.
"Who is this Al-Muthanna?" asked Abu Bekr, as tidings of success
kept reaching Medina, "and to what clan does he belong?" Learning
that he was of the great Bekr tribe which peopled that vicinity, he
commanded him to "march forward fighting in the ways of the Lord."
The service was such as Bedawin love; and his column was soon swelled
to 8000 men. But opposition gathered in front. The Christian and heathen
tribes were roused; and Abu Bekr, anticipating the impending struggle,
resolved that "the Sword of the Lord" should be again unsheathed, and
so Khalid was deputed to subdue Chaldæa.
48
Troops sent to 'Irak. i. 12 A.H. March 633 A.D.
By the beginning of the twelfth year of the Hijra rebellion
had been put down throughout Arabia, excepting the south,
which was also in fair way of pacification. It became now Abu Bekr's
policy to turn his restless Arab columns to similar work elsewhere.
He despatched two armies to the north. One, under command of Khalid
joined by Al-Muthanna, was to march on Ubulla, an ancient city near
the mouth of the Euphrates, and from thence, driving the enemy up the
western bank, to work its way towards Al-Hira the capital of Chaldæa.
'Iyad, at the head of the other, was directed to Duma (midway between
the head of the Red Sea and Persian Gulf) which had cast off its allegiance,
and thence to pass also on to Al-Hira. Whichever first reached that city
was to be in command of the country1.
Khalid joins Muthanna in 'Irak.
'Iyad, hampered by his enemy, was long detained in the neighbourhood of
Duma. Khalid, meeting no such obstacle, was joined on his march from
Al-Yemama to Al-'Irak by large bodies of Bedawin. These were of the
greater service, as his numbers had been thinned, not only by the carnage
at Al-Yemama, but also by the free permission given the army, after that
arduous campaign, to proceed on furlough to their homes. Nevertheless,
the expedition was so popular that when, after a flying visit to the Caliph,
Khalid rejoined his camp by the Euphrates, he found himself at the head
of 10,000 men; and this besides the 8000 of Al-Muthanna, who hastened
loyally to place himself under the great leader's command.
Mesopotamia and the Syrian desert.
The country before them was in some of its features familiar to the invading
army, in others new and strange. From the head of the Persian Gulf across to
the Dead Sea stretches a stony desert, trackless and bereft of water. Advancing
north, Nature relaxes; the plain, still a wilderness, is in season clothed with
verdure, bright with flowers, instinct with the song of birds and hum of
winged life. Such is the pasture-land which for hundreds of miles lies between
Damascus and the Tigris. Still farther north, the desert gradually disappears,
and about the latitude of Mosul blends with the hills and vales of Asia Minor.
Athwart the country
49
from Aleppo to Babylon runs the Euphrates, while the far east is bounded by
the Tigris flowing under the mountain range that separates 'Irak 'Arabi1
from Persia. Between the two rivers lies Mesopotamia, full of patriarchal
memories. Over this great plain there roamed (as still there roam) Bedawi tribes
with flocks and herds. The greater part had long professed the Christian religion.
Those on the Syrian side, as the Ghassan of Bosra, owed allegiance to the Roman
Empire; those on the east were dependent upon Persia. But nomad life tends to
fickle loyalty and laxity of faith; and so, not infrequently, these northern Arabs
were now led by affinity with their brethren of Arabia, as well as by the lust of
plunder, to desert their ancient allies and ancestral faith, and cast in their lot
with the invading columns.
Chaldæa and Delta of the Euphrates.
The lower Euphrates, 'Irak al-'Arabi, is in striking contrast with the region just
described. The two great rivers, while yet far from the sea approach each other;
but, instead of joining, still keep apart and, for some two hundred and fifty miles
running parallel, inclose the memorable plain of Dura. The country is covered
with long hillocks and mounds marking the ancient channels of irrigation,
and strewed with fragments of brick and pottery, remnants of a dim antiquity.
The face of the land was not then, as now, a barren waste, but richly cultivated
and watered by canals. On the Tigris, a little below where the two rivers first
approach each other was Al-Medain, "the double city"2
(so called from Seleucia on the western bank and Ctesiphon on the eastern),
then the capital of Persia. Fifty miles farther south, a mass of shapeless mounds,
looking down upon the Euphrates from its eastern shore, marks the site of Babylon,
and from their summit may be descried the Birs Nimrud, or "Tower of Babel,"
rearing its weird head on the horizon of the verdant plain. Thirty miles yet farther
south lay Al-Hira, capital of the surrounding Arab tribes. It stood (like its
successor Al-Kufa) on a branch which issues from the Euphrates by a channel
in the live rock, cut by the hand of man but of unknown antiquity. Sweeping
along the
50
west, this rival stream feeds many marshes, especially the great lake called
the "Sea of Najaf"; and, after a wide circuit, rejoins the Euphrates above its
junction with the Tigris. There was in olden times another branch called the
"Trench of Sapor" which, intended as a bar to Bedawi incursions, and taking
a yet wider range to the west, returned into the parent river near Ubulla.
This branch, now dry, originally carried a stream, which like the other helped
materially to widen the green belt pressed in upon by the western sandy desert.
The lower Delta again, subject to tidal flow, alluvial, low and watered with ease,
is covered with a sea of corn; and from its beauty has been called the "Garden
of the world." Besides the familiar palm, the country abounds with the fig,
mulberry, and pomegranate. But the climate is close and oppressive; the fens
and marshes, always liable to inundation, were aggravated by neglect of dams
and sluices in those days of anarchy; and so the invading force, used to
nothing but the sandy steppes of the Peninsula, gazed wonderingly at the
luxuriant growth of reeds and rushes, and at the buffaloes driven by pestiferous
insects to hide their unwieldy bodies beneath the water, or splash lazily along
the shallow waste of endless lagoons. Chaldæa from the estuary upwards was
cultivated, as now, by Fellahin or Arab peasantry, and these were lorded
over by Dikkans, or district officers of the Persian Court 1.
Khalid summons Hormuz.
Such, then, was the magnificent province lying between the Desert and
mountain range of Persiathe cradle of civilization and the artswhich
now attracted the Muslim arms. The first to oppose them was Hormuz, Satrap
of the Delta, a tyrant hated by his Arab subjects. To him, as master of the tribes
gathering in front, Khalid addressed a letter in the haughty type of Muslim
summons: "Accept the Faith and thou art safe; else pay tribute, thou and
thy people; which if thou refusest, thou shalt have thyself to blame. A people
is already on thee, loving death even as thou lovest life2."
51
Then placing Al-Muthanna in command of the advanced column, and
'Adi son of Hatim (the famous chieftain of the Beni Tai') over the second,
Khalid himself bringing up the rear, advanced on Al-Hafir, the frontier station
of the Persian Empire1.
Battle of Chains. Hormuz slain.
Startled by the strange summons, Hormuz having sent word to Chosroes
the King2, himself set out
to meet the invader with an army whose wings were commanded by Princes
of the royal blood. He marched in haste, thinking to have an easy victory
over untrained desert tribes; and being first to reach the water bed of Al-Hafir,
took possession of its springs. Khalid coming up, bade his force alight and
at once unload their burdens. "Then," said he, "let us fight for the water
forthwith; by my life! the springs shall be for the braver of the two."
Thereupon Hormuz challenged Khalid to single combat and, though he
treacherously posted an ambuscade, was in the encounter slain. The Muslims
then rushed forward and with great slaughter put the enemy to flight, pursuing
them to the banks of the Euphrates. The Arabs had now a foretaste of the
spoils of Persia. The share of each horseman was a thousand pieces, besides
great store of arms. The jewelled tiara of Hormuz, symbol of his rank, was
sent to the Caliph with the royal fifth. An elephant taken in the field and led
as part of the prize to Medina, was paraded about the town much to the wonder
of the admiring citizens, but eventually sent back as unsuitable to the place.
The action was called Dhat as-Salasil, "the Mistress of the Chains,"
from a portion of the Persian soldiers being bound together (as tradition
contemptuously says) to prevent their giving way.
"The Lady’s Castle."
The defeated army fled towards the Capital, and Al-Muthanna with his horse
hastened after them. Crossing the Euphrates, he came upon a fortress called
"The Lady's Castle," held by a Persian princess. Leaving his brother to besiege it,
he advanced to a second fort defended by her husband. This he took by storm,
and put the garrison to the sword; which, when the lady heard
52
of; she embraced Islam and, forgetting her Persian lord,
gave her hand to Al-Muthanna's brother.
Persians again defeated.
The ardour of Al-Muthanna was near to causing a disaster. When the message of Hormuz
reached Al-Medain, the King despatched another prince with troops to reinforce him. Rallying
the defeated army, this force met Al-Muthanna who had been stopped by the Great Canal (a
branch of the Tigris which runs athwart the Peninsula), and placed him with his small flying
column in great peril. Khalid, apprised of the check, hastened to relieve his lieutenant, and
just in time. The field was fiercely contested. Again the enemy fled; a prodigious number
were either slain or drowned; the remainder escaped in boats. The deep canal stopped further
pursuit, but the spoil of the camp was very great. Khalid scoured the country, killing all the
men fit for war and taking their women captive. But the fellahin or unwarlike peasants he
left unharmed.
Victory of Walaja, ii. 12 A.H. April 633 A.D.
The Court was now thoroughly aroused. Arab invaders, it was said, would best be matched
by Arabs who knew their tactics; and so the King raised a great levy of the Bekr and other
loyal clans, under a famous warrior of their own. He also summoned Bahman, a veteran
general, from the east, to command the imperial troops. The combined army, in imposing
force, advanced to Al-Walaja, near the junction of the two rivers. Leaving a detachment
to guard his conquests in the Delta, Khalid marched to meet the enemy. The battle, long
and obstinate, was won by the tactics of the Muslim leader, who surprised the exhausted
enemy by ambuscades placed in their rear. The discomfiture was complete. The Persians
fled; and with them their Bedawi allies, but not until many had been taken prisoners.
Khalid’s oration.
Flushed with success as he gazed at the scene around, Khalid thus addressed his followers:"O
see ye not the food, plentiful as flintstones? Ay, by God, were it not ours to fight for God
against the unbelievers, and were it only as a means of living, the right opinion would be
to lay our stakes for these fair fields, until we show ourselves worthy of them, and give
over hunger and penury to those who prefer them and who find burdensome that which
you are enduring.1"
53
Khalid here struck a chord delightful to the Bedawi heart. Now, also, the inducements
with respect to the other sex began to tell. Persian ladies, both maids and matrons, as
"captives of their right hand" were forthwith, without stint of number, and by permission
which they held divine, lawful to the conqueror's embrace; and, in the enjoyment of this
privilege, they were nothing loth to execute upon the heathen "the judgment written."
Thus religious fanaticism grew along with martial ardour, both riveted by motives native
to the Arabfight and foray, spoil of war, and captive charms.
Battle of Ulleis, iii. 12 A.H. May 633 A.D.
The cup, however, had but just touched their lips, and many a chance might yet dash it
from them. The great family of the Beni Bekr was divided in the struggle, part holding
with Khalid and part with Persia. A bitter feeling was aroused between the Bedawin of
Mesopotamia and the invaders, aggravated by defeat and by the treatment of those taken
captive. Smarting under injury, the Christian tribes roused their nomad brethren on both
banks of the Euphrates, and urged the Court of Persia to revenge. Just then Ardashir
the King fell sick, and Bahman was detained at Court; but he sent an army across the
Euphrates to join the loyal Bedawin, who from every side flocked to Ulleis (Allis), half-way
between Al-Hira and Ubulla. News of this great rising forced Khalid to fall back hastily,
and recross the Euphrates. Then leaving a strong detachment at Al-Hafir to secure his rear,
he boldly advanced to meet the enemy. The Arab tribes first rushed to the attack, and
Khalid slew their leader. Then the Persians with a vast front came up, and the Muslims
were hard pressed as they never had been before. The battle was fiercely contested,
and the issue at one time was so doubtful, that Khalid vowed to the Lord that in event
of victory the blood of his foes should flow as in a crimson stream. At last the Persians,
unable to withstand the impetuous onset, broke and fled. To fulfil his savage oath,
Khalid proclaimed that no fugitive should be slain, but all brought alive into the camp.
For two days the country was scoured by the Muslim horse, and a great multitude
of prisoners gathered.
The "River of Blood.
Then the butchery commenced in the dry bed of a canal, but the earth drank up the blood.
Company after company was beheaded, and
54
still the gory flux remained. At last, by advice of an Arab chief; Khalid had a floodgate
opened, and the blood-red tide redeemed his vow. There were flour-mills upon the spot,
and for three days corn for the army was ground by the reddened flood. We may hope
that tradition has magnified the details of this great barbarity; but its memory lived in
the name of the "River of Blood" by which thereafter the ill-omened stream was called.
A Persian supper on the field.
The battle over, a sumptuous repast was found ready spread in the enemy's camp,
to which the Persians, when surprised by Khalid, were about to sit down;a novel
experience for the simple Arabs, who handled the white fritters with childish delight,
and devoured with avidity rich pancakes and other Eastern delicacies. Khalid ate
his supper leaning on the body of a stalwart hero, "the equal of a thousand warriors,"
whom in single combat he had but just cut down. Tidings of the victory, with choice
portion of the spoil, a welcome earnest of the royal fifth to follow, were at once despatched
to Abu Bekr The messenger, himself a brave warrior, described the heat and progress
of the battle, the feats and prowess of its heroes, the multitude of captives and the riches
of the spoil.
Abu Bekr’s delight.
The Caliph, overjoyed at his glowing tale, bestowed upon the envoy a beautiful
damsel from amongst the captive maidens he had carried with him.
The principality of Hira.
For the moment the spirit of the Persians was broken; but their Bedawi allies proved so
troublesome to Khalid, and occupied a position from which they could so materially annoy
his rear and communications with Medina, that he resolved on reducing the whole tract
west of the Euphrates occupied by these tribes, together with Al-Hira its capital. The Lakhmid
dynasty had long ceased to rule over this city, which now for many years had been governed
by a Persian Satrap. Partly from its interests being akin to those of the Christian tribes of
Mesopotamia, partly from its being a dependency of Persia, the influence of Al-Hira had hitherto
been little felt in Arabia proper. But recent events had shown that even the Beni Bekr might
combine with the border capital to resist the invader; and to prevent the recurrence of such
a danger, Khalid now directed his steps to Al-Hira.
55
Amghisiya sacked.
With this view he advanced rapidly up the western channel of the Euphrates, and surprised
Amghisiya, a town the rival of Al-Hira in size and wealth1.
The inhabitants fled, and the booty was so rich that each horseman's share reached 1500 pieces.
When the fifth reached Medina, Abu Bekr was overwhelmed at the sight; "Oh ye Koreish,"
he exclaimed in ecstasy, "verily your lion, the lion of Islam, hath leapt upon the lion of Persia,
and spoiled him of his prey. Surely the womb is exhausted. Woman shall no more bear
a second Khalid!"
Hira besieged and capitulates.
Finding boats at Amghisiya, Khalid embarked his infantry and baggage, and was tracking up
the stream to besieged Al-Hira when, the Satrap having opened some irrigating escapes above,
the flotilla grounded suddenly. Apprised of the cause, Khalid hastened with a flying squadron
to the canal-head, closed the sluices and enabled the boats again to ascend. Then the army,
having disembarked and taken possession of the beautiful palaces of the Princes of
Al-Hira2, encamped before the city walls.
The Satrap fled across the river; but the city, defended as it was by four citadels, refused to
surrender. The ramparts were manned, and the besiegers kept at bay by the discharge of missiles.
A monastery and cloisters lay without; and at length the monks and clergy, exposed to the fury
of the besiegers, induced the citizens to capitulate on easy terms embodied in a treaty. Then
they brought gifts, which Khalid accepted and despatched to Medina. Abu Bekr ratified the
treaty and accepted the presents, but desired that their value should be deducted from the tribute.
Treaty with Hira.
The men of Al-Hira bound themselves to pay a yearly tribute, for which all classes, saving
religious mendicants, were assessed. The Muslims, on their part, engaged to protect the
city from attack. The treaty, though shortly set aside by the rising which swept over the
land, is interesting as the first concluded with a principality lying without the Peninsula.
One strange condition may be mentioned. The beauty of Kerama had been long proverbial, and
a soldier laid claim to her on the ground that Mohammad, hearing him extol her charms, had
promised (so the story
56
runs) that when Al-Hira was captured she should be his bride. Khalid insisted that the prophetic
promise should be now fulfilled. The thing was grievous to the lady's household, but she took
it lightly. "Care not for it," she said, "the fool saw me in my youth, and hath forgotten that
youth remaineth not for ever." He soon found out that it was even so, and was glad to name
a ransom, which having paid, she returned to her people.
Hira remains Christian, 12 A.H. 633 A.D.
The occupation of Al-Hira was the first definite step in the outward movement of Islam. Here
Khalid fixed his headquarters and remained a year. It was, in fact, the earliest Muslim capital
beyond the limits of Arabia. The administration was left with the heads of the city, who were
at the least neutral. Khalid, indeed, expected that being of Arab descent, and themselves long
ruled by a native dynasty, the inhabitants would actively have joined his cause. 'Adi, grandson
of the poet of that name, was one of the deputation which concluded the peace. "Tell me,"
said Khalid, rallying him, "whether ye be of Arab or of Persian blood?" "Judge by our speech;
doth that betray ignoble birth?" "True," answered Khalid; "thell why do ye not join our faith,
and cast in your lot with us? "Nay," answered the Christian, "that we shall never do; the faith
of our fathers we shall not abjure, but shall pay tribute unto thee." "Beshrew the fools!" cried
Khalid; "unbelief is as a trackless desert; and the wanderer in it the silliest of the Arabs. Here
are two guides, an Arab and a stranger; and of the two they choose the stranger!" The flux
and reflux of Roman invasion had, no doubt, loosened their faith in Persia; but the Court of
Al-Medain was near at hand and, though in the last stage of senility, sufficiently strong to retain
its hold upon a small dependency like Al-Hira. The permanence of Arab conquest, too, was yet
uncertain; the love of their ancestral faith was still predominant; and so the city chose to remain
tributary. Several centuries later we find the inhabitants of the neighbourhood in considerable
numbers still attached to the Christian faith1.
Prayer and Service of Victory.
Public prayer, outward symbol of the dominant faith, was
57
now established; and the citizens might hear the cry of the Muezzin, as five times a day,
beginning with the earliest dawn, it resounded from the adjacent camp. Khalid celebrated
his success in a special Service of Victory. The occasion was memorable. Clad in
a flowing robe girt loosely about the neck, he turned, when prayers were ended, to the
assembly and thus extolled their bravery: "In the field of Muta, when fighting with the Greeks,
nine swords were broken in my hand. But I met not any there to match the foes ye have
encountered here; and of these none more valiant than the men of Ulleis." The early campaign
in Al-'Irak, indeed, is surrounded by tradition with a special halo; for the loss on the Muslim
side had not hitherto been great, and the fighting here could hardly have compared with that
of many a well-contested field in the Prophet's time.
Administration of the province.
While Al-Hira was left in the hands of its chief men, summary rule was set up over the adjacent
country. The Dihkansgreat landholders and imperial taxgatherershad been
waiting upon fortune. Seeing now that Khalid carried everything before him, many began to
tender submission and enter into engagements for the revenue. Abu Bekr had wisely enjoined
that the fellahin should be maintained in possession, and their rights as occupiers of the soil
respected. The demand remained unchanged, with the addition only of a light poll-tax. In other
respects, the terms, made with the consent and approval of the army, corresponded with those
of Al-Hira. Holding their ancestral faith, the people became dhimmis, or protected
dependants. Khalid undertook
expressed in these verses sung by one of their poets. Al-Mundhir and An-No'man were
Princes of the Lakhmid dynasty:
"Now that the Princes of the house of Al-Mundhir are gone, shall I ever again
behold the royal herd of camels returning at eve from the pastures of
Khawarnak and Sedir?
Now that the horsemen of An-No'man are passed away, shall I ever again feed
the young she-camel on the pastures between Mecca and Hafir?
Like a flock of goats on a stormy day, we are scattered by the Beni Ma'add (the
invading Muslims), even as pieces of camels slaughtered for the feast.
Heretofore our homes were sacred, and we like the teats of a well-filled udder,
Yielding tribute at the appointed times to the Chosroes, and imposts in cattle and gold.
Such is Fortune: her revolution is like that of the buckets. Now the day
ascends with joy and gladness, and now it sinks into darkness and distress."
58
to defend them, and they on their part pledged allegiance and bound themselves to give notice
if danger threatened. Garrisons were quartered here and there, and the troops held ready in
movable columns. Thus the country west of the Euphrates was kept in check, and also the
lower Delta to the east. Throughout this region none was secure from rapine but such as
had entered into engagements. Hostages were taken for the revenue; and a formal discharge
given upon its payment. The tribute, as well as the booty, was all distributed amongst the
army "for the strengthening of its will and emboldening of its courage."
Persia paralysed by internal troubles.
Persia meanwhile was hopelessly distracted. Male progeny near the throne had been
so ruthlessly massacred, that no heir of royal blood could anywhere be found, and a rapid
succession of feeble claimants was set up by the princesses left to form the Court. Thus
paralysed, the Persians did little more than protect Al-Medain by holding in force the
country opposite as far as the Nahr-shir, a deep channel which, drawn from the Euphrates,
flowed athwart the Peninsula. This line was threatened by Al-Muthanna but Abu Bekr
gave stringent orders that no advance should be made till all was secure behind. No tidings,
moreover, had as yet been received from 'Iyad at Duma, with whom co-operation was imperative.
Khalid fretted at remaining thus inactive, "playing," as he complained, "for so many months
the woman's part." But he curbed his ardour, and contented himself with inditing two letters,
in imperious tone, one to "the Princes of Persia," the other to "the Satraps and inhabitants at large."
Anbar.
Towards the north and west, however, aggressive measures were continued. Siege was laid
to Al-Anbar, a fortress on the Euphrates some eighty miles above Babylon. The worn-out
camels of the army were slain and cast into the deep fosse, which thus was crossed and the
city captured. The Persian governor sued for terms, and was permitted to retire. Al-Anbar
and the well-watered neighbourhood thus secured, the army attacked 'Ain at-Tamr, the Spring
of the Date palm, a fortress on the desert border three days' journey farther west. The
Persian troops were here supported by a great gathering of Arab tribes, and among them the
same Taghlib levies which had followed their
59
prophetess to Al-Yemama. These met Khalid as he approached, but were repulsed, and the
Persian governor seeing the route from the ramparts, fled and left the fugitives to defend
themselves as best they could.
Khalid’s severity.
Refused terms, they surrendered at discretion. The persistent opposition of the Christian
Bedawin now led Khalid into an unwise severity that embittered them against him. Their
leader was beheaded in front of the city walls, and every adult male of the garrison led forth
and put to death; while the women and children were made over to the soldiers or sold into
slavery.
Christian students.
In a cloister of the church hard by, were forty youths who in their terror barred the door upon
the enemy. When the retreat was forced, they gave themselves up as students receiving
instruction in the Gospel. Their lives were spared, and they were distributed among the leaders.
The fate of these unfortunate youths, snatched from a Nestorian seminary to be brought up
as captives in the Muslim faith, must have been common enough in the rude and sanguinary
tide of Saracen invasion; the reason why tradition makes special mention of these, is that
amongst them were progenitors of several distinguished men, such as Ibn Ishak the historian,
and Musa the conqueror of Spain.
'Iyad at Duma.
All this while 'Iyad, who ought long before to have joined Khalid, was battling unsuccessfully
with enemies at Duma. The Caliph becoming anxious, sent Al-Welid who had been deputed
by Khalid to Medina in charge of royal booty, to assist 'Iyad, who by his advice despatched
an urgent message for help to Khalid. The courier arrived just after the fall of 'Ain at-Tamr;
and Khalid, with no enemy now in the field, answered 'Iyid thus in martial verse
"Wait, my friend, but for a moment, speedily shall help appear;
Cohort upon cohort follows, waving sword and glittering spear."
Leaving Al-Ka'ka' in command at Al-Hira, and starting at once with the flower of his force,
he crossed the intervening desert, and made good his word.
Duma stormed by Khalid, vii. 12 A.H. Sept. 633 A.D.
He was not a day too soon. Okeidir and Al-Judi, Chiefs of Duma, were supported by the
Beni Kelb and other tribes from the Syrian desert; and now the Beni Ghassan were pouring
down from the north, under Jabala, the Christian prince of Bosra. The position of 'Iyad,
thus beset, grew
60
day by day more critical. The advent of Khalid changed the scene at once. His very
name was a tower of strength. Okeidir had already felt his prowess, having several years
before been taken by him prisoner to Medina1.
Much afraid, he hastened to surrender, but on the way was taken prisoner and beheaded.
Then 'Iyad on the Syrian side, and Khalid on the Persian, attacked the hostile tribes
and utterly routed them. Jabala effected his flight to Bosra. But the hapless crowd that
remained were hemmed in between the two forces and none escaped. The gate of the fort
was battered down, and the crowded inmates put promiscuously to the sword. The women
were sold to the highest bidder; and the most beautiful of them, the daughter of the
unfortunate Judi, was bought by Khalid for himself. Celebrating thus fresh nuptials on
the field of battle, he enjoyed a short repose at Duma, while the main body of the troops,
marching back to Al-Hira, were there received with timbrels and cymbals and outward
demonstrations of rejoicing.
Expeditions in 'Irak, viii. 12 A.H. Oct. 633 A.D.
But all was not going on smoothly in that vicinity. The absence of Khalid had encouraged
the Persians and their Arab allies, especially the Beni Taghlib, still smarting under the execution
of their leader, to resume offensive operations. Al-Ka'ka', though on the alert, was able
to do no more than guard the frontier and protect Al-Anbar from threatened inroad2.
At this news, Khalid hastened back; and placing 'Iyad in the government of Al-Hira,
despatched Al-Ka'ka' across the Euphrates, while he himself appointed a rendezvous at
'Ain at-Tamr to attack the Taghlib tribe; for he had vowed that thus he would crush the
viper in its nest. On the eastern bank, the Persians were routed and their leaders killed;
while on the western, by a series of brilliant and well-planned night attacks, the Bedawin
were repeatedly surprised as they slept secure in their desert homes, cut to pieces, and
their families carried off. Thus Khalid fulfilled his vow. Multitudes of women many of
noble birth, were distributed among the army. A portion also, with rich booty, were sent
to Medina, and there disposed of by sale3.
61
Battle of Firad. Persians, Greeks, and Bedawin defeated, xi. 12 A.H. Jan. 634 A.D.
Following up his Bedawi foes, Khalid at last reached Al-Firad on the Syrian border, and
by the river rested his army during the fast of Ramadan and for some weeks after. But the
Byzantine garrison on the frontier, uneasy at the prolonged encampment and threatening
attitude of Khalid, and making common cause with the Persian outposts and neighbouring
loyal tribes, advanced in imposing force to chase the invader away. They challenged
Khalid to cross the river; but the wary General bade them rather come over to the eastern
bank. A long and severe conflict ensued. The Muslims were victorious; the cavalry
pursued the fugitives, and the carnage must have been great, for tradition places it at the
fabulous number of a hundred thousand.
Khalid’s incognito pilgrimage, xii. 12 A.H. Feb. 634 A.D.
For the moment opposition was crushed, and no enemy anywhere in sight. The season
for the Meccan pilgrimage now at hand, Khalid formed the singular resolve of performing it
incognitounknown even to his royal Master. So, having recruited his army for ten
days on the well-fought field, he gave orders to march slowly and by easy stages back to
Al-Hira. Then, making as though he remained behind, he set out secretly with a small escort
on the pious errand. Without a guide, he traversed the devious desert route with marvellous
sagacity and speed. Having accomplished the rites of Pilgrimage, he retraced his steps from
Mecca with like despatch, and re-entered Al-Hira in early spring, just as the rear-guard was
marching in. So well had he kept his secret, that the army thought he had been all the while
at Al-Firad, and now was journeying slowly back. Even Abu Bekr, who himself presided at
the pilgrimage, was unaware of the presence of his great general. When, after some time,
the secret visit came to his knowledge, he was much displeased. But the action which he
took in consequence belongs to the succeeding year.
tribe, and the son she bore him, hence called Ibn al-Hanefiya (the son of the Hanefite woman),
whose descendants being thus of the stock of Ali, had a political rule of which we shall hear
hereafter. He is said also to have married in this year a granddaughter of the Prophet, Umama,
the child of Zeinab, and niece of his deceased wife Fatima.
The Caliphate: Its Rise, Decline, and Fall [Table of Contents]
Answering Islam Home Page