Abd Allah ibn Muti

ʿAbd Allāh ibn Muṭīʿ al-ʿAdawī (died 692) was a leading Qurayshite of Medina and governor of Kufa for the anti-Umayyad caliph Abd Allah ibn al-Zubayr from April 685 until his ouster by the pro-Alid leader al-Mukhtar al-Thaqafi in August 685. He held earlier command roles against the Umayyads at the battle of al-Harra and the siege of Mecca in 683. He fought alongside Ibn al-Zubayr in a second siege of Mecca in 692, where he was slain by Umayyad forces.

Abd Allah ibn Muti
Governor of Kufa
MonarchAbd Allah ibn al-Zubair
Preceded byAbd Allah ibn Yazid al-Khath'ami
Succeeded byAl-Mukhtar al-Thaqafi
Personal details
Died692
Mecca
Spouse(s)
  • Rayta bint Abd Allah
  • Umm Abd al-Malik bint Abd Allah ibn Khalid
  • Umm Hakim bint Abd Allah
  • Bint Kharash ibn Umayya
  • two slave girls
Children
  • Ishaq
  • Ya'qub
  • Muhammad
  • Imran
  • Ibrahim
  • Isma'il
  • Zakariyya
  • Fatima (daughter)
  • Umm Salama (daughter)
  • Umm Hisham (daughter)
  • Burayha (daughter)
Parents
  • Muti ibn al-Aswad (father)
  • Umm Hisham bint Abi'l Khiyar Abd Yall ibn Abd Manaf (mother)
Military service
Battles/wars

Origins and family

Abd Allah ibn Muti was born during the lifetime of the Islamic prophet Muhammad (d. 632).[1] He was the son of Muti ibn al-Aswad; they belonged to the Banu Adi clan of the Quraysh tribe of Mecca.[2][3][4][lower-alpha 1] His mother was Umm Hisham bint Abi'l Khiyar Abd Yall ibn Abd Manaf.[1]

Ibn Muti resided in Medina, the political center of the Caliphate.[2][3] He owned shared residential property in the city with the early companion of Muhammad and poet Zayd ibn Thabit. The two entered a legal dispute over the property which was arbitrated by Marwan ibn al-Hakam, the governor of the city in 661–668.[5] Ibn Muti also owned property and a well called the Well of Ibn Muti after him located between al-Abwa and al-Suqya.[1]

Ibn Muti had seven sons and four daughters from different wives and slave women: from his wife Rayta bint Abd Allah he had his sons Ishaq and Ya'qub; with his wife Umm Abd al-Malik bint Abd Allah ibn Khalid he had his sons Muhammad and Imran; from his wife Umm Hakim bint Abd Allah he had a daughter, Fatima, and from his fourth wife Bint Kharash ibn Umayya he had two daughters, Umm Salama and Umm Hisham. From his two slave women he had his sons Ibrahim, Isma'il and Zakariyya and a daughter, Burayha.[1] His grandson Abd al-Aziz ibn Ibrahim participated in the rebellion of Muhammad al-Nafs al-Zakiyya in 762/63 and was arrested, given lashes and released by the Abbasid caliph al-Mansur.[4]

Military career

In 664 or 665, he was dispatched by Caliph Mu'awiya I at the head of 4,000 Medinese soldiers to reinforce the Arab garrison in Alexandria after the garrison commander of the city complained his troops were numerically insufficient to control its oft-rebellious Greek Christian inhabitants.[6] He is later mentioned in the historical record in 680. At that time, he issued a warning to Husayn ibn Ali, the surviving grandson of the Islamic prophet Muhammad and son of Caliph Ali (r. 656–661), not to leave Mecca for Kufa where sympathizers of his father called for him to claim the caliphate from the ruling Umayyad dynasty. He advised him to take up safe haven in the Ka'aba of Mecca where he would rally supporters from the Quraysh against Caliph Yazid (r. 680–683).[7] After a short stay in Mecca, Husayn ultimately headed for Kufa and once again encountered Ibn Muti at a watering place along the desert route, where Ibn Muti pleaded that he not confront the Umayyads.[8] Husayn was slain by Umayyad forces at the Battle of Karbala on the outskirts of Kufa. Ibn Muti had attempted to depart Medina as well, but was persuaded by his distant relative Abd Allah ibn Umar to remain in the city and not rebel against the caliph.[9]

When Yazid sent his envoy Nu'man ibn Bashir al-Ansari to warn the inhabitants of Medina in 682 not to rebel against the caliph's rule, Ibn Muti derided him.[10] The people of Medina rose in revolt and Yazid dispatched his Syrian troops led by Muslim ibn Uqba to subdue the city. The Medinese were organized along factional lines and Ibn Muti was made commander of the Quraysh contingent.[11] After the Syrians bested the Medinese, Ibn Muti and many of his Qurayshite fighters fled for Mecca where they received safe haven with the Qurayshite leader Abd Allah ibn al-Zubayr.[12] He later became one of the main commanders of Mecca's defense during the abortive Umayyad siege of the city.[13]

Governorship of Kufa

After Yazid's death, Ibn al-Zubayr gained recognition as caliph in most of the provinces of the Caliphate except parts of Syria. He appointed Ibn Muti governor of Kufa and its dependencies in April 685, replacing Abd Allah ibn Yazid al-Khath'ami.[9][14] Upon hearing from his advisers news of Ibn Muti's appointment, the Syria-based Umayyad caliph Abd al-Malik called him "a brave man who has fallen many a time, and a valiant one, how he hates fleeing".[15] Ibn Muti appointed Iyas ibn Mudarib al-Ijli as the head of his shurṭa with orders to severely punish seditious activities in the city.[16] After Iyas raised suspicions of rebellion by the pro-Alid noble al-Mukhtar al-Thaqafi (who fought alongside Ibn Muti against the Umayyads in Mecca[13]), Ibn Muti attempted to summon the latter. Al-Mukhtar delayed his appearance before the governor and secretly organized a coup against him by his Kufan partisans.[16]

The Kufan Arab nobility largely supported Ibn Muti, but Mukhtar's forces became empowered with the recruitment of the Kufan grandee Ibrahim ibn al-Ashtar. Ibn al-Ashtar was instrumental in the fighting which ultimately forced Ibn Muti to withdraw from the city.[17] Most of the fighting took place in the streets and alleys of Kufa, with the pro-Alid opponents of the governor led by al-Sa'ib ibn Malik al-Ash'ari and Ibn al-Ashtar ultimately besting Ibn Muti's men and forcing him and a small coterie of supporters to barricade in the city's fortified palace.[18] He was persuaded by his loyalist, the Arab noble Shabath ibn Rib'i al-Tamimi, to secretly escape the city alone after refusing an earlier suggestion to formally surrender, which he deemed a betrayal of Ibn al-Zubayr.[19][18] Ibn Muti praised the Arab nobles on his side and dismissed Mukhtar's supporters as lowly men before evacuating.[18] His supporters then obtained safe conduct in return for giving al-Mukhtar their allegiance.[18] In a different account of events, Ibn Muti departs Kufa after being granted 100,000 silver dirhams and safe conduct by al-Mukhtar.[20]

Later service and death

After leaving Kufa, Ibn Muti established himself in Basra where the Zubayrids remained in control.[9] Ibn Muti returned to Mecca in the company of Basra's governor, Ibn al-Zubayr's brother Mus'ab, in 689/90.[21] Despite a pardon issued for him by Abd al-Malik,[22] Ibn Muti fought and died alongside Ibn al-Zubayr during the Umayyad siege of Mecca led by al-Hajjaj ibn Yusuf in late 692.[9][23]

Notes

  1. His paternal descent is traced back to the progenitor of the Banu Adi as follows: ʿAbd Allāh ibn Muṭīʿ ibn al-Aswad ibn Ḥāritha ibn Naḍala ibn ʿAwf ibn ʿUbayd ibn ʿUwayj ibn ʿAdī.

References

  1. Bewley 2000, p. 96.
  2. Howard 1990, p. 22, note 101.
  3. Hawting 1989, p. 115, note 459.
  4. Elad 2016, p. 283.
  5. Bewley 1989, p. 300.
  6. Bruning 2018, p. 38, note 76.
  7. Howard 1990, pp. 22–23.
  8. Howard 1990, pp. 84–85.
  9. Zetterstéen & Pellat 1960, p. 50.
  10. Howard 1990, p. 200.
  11. Howard 1990, pp. 208–209.
  12. Vaglieri 1971, p. 227.
  13. Hawting 1989, p. 115.
  14. Hawting 1989, pp. 175–176, 187.
  15. Hawting 1989, p. 186.
  16. Hawting 1989, pp. 188–189.
  17. Fishbein 1990, p. 10, note 46.
  18. Haider 2019, p. 41.
  19. Fishbein 1990, p. 11, note 52.
  20. Haider 2019, p. 77.
  21. Fishbein 1990, p. 169.
  22. Bewley 2000, p. 98.
  23. McAuliffe 1995, p. 230, note 1082.

Bibliography

Further reading

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