
Silver dirham following Sassanid motives, struck in the name of Ubayd Allah
Ubayd Allah ibn Ziyad (Arabic language: عبيد الله بن زياد) was an early Muslim general and governor for the Umayyad Caliphate.
Biography[]
He was the son of Ziyad ibn Abi Sufyan. After his father's death in 673, Ubayd became the Governor of Kufa and Basra and later Khurasan. He also minted coinage, which survives to this day. In 674 he would cross the Amu Darya and defeat the forces of the ruler of Bukhara what would become the first known invasion of the city by Muslim Arabs.[1]
In 680, Yazid ordered Ubayd Allah to keep order in Kufa as a reaction to grandson of Prophet, Husayn ibn Ali's popularity there. Ubayd Allah appointed his brother Uthman as deputy and marched to Kufa. Ubayd Allah executed Hussain ibn Ali’s cousin Muslim ibn Aqeel and put out the right eye of Hussain ibn Ali’s supporter Al-Mukhtar. He was also one of the leaders of the army of Yazid I during the battle of Karbala.
Yazid left a vacuum in Iraq upon his death in 683. Ubayd Allah abdicated the governor's mansion in Basra and took up shelter with Mas'ud ibn Amr al-Azdi. The Azd were a Yemenite tribe who then supported the Umayyads against the rebellion of Abd Allah ibn al-Zubayr. But Basra's new governor Abd Allah ibn al-Harith sided with Ibn al-Zubayr, and had Mas'ud killed the following spring; some traditions add, probably accurately, that Ubayd Allah and Mas'ud had complained about Ibn al-Harith's corruption (again, probably accurately - but the Basrans did not then care) with a view to regaining for Ubayd Allah his command. Ubayd Allah fled the city for Syria - leaving his wife and family behind. (Madelung pp. 301–303)
While Ubayd Allah was in Syria, he persuaded Marwan ibn al-Hakam not to recognise Ibn al-Zubayr. Meanwhile the messianic campaigner al-Mukhtar wrested Kufa from Ibn al-Zubayr in 685. Seeing his chance, or so he thought, Ubayd Allah sent an army against al-Mukhtar. According to contemporary historian John bar Penkaye, al-Mukhtar sent an army of 13,000 lightly armed freedmen on foot under the command of Ibrahim ibn al-Ashtar. At the river al-Khazir Ibrahim met with Ubayd Allah, whose army had 40,000 soldiers. In the ensuing battle, Ubayd Allah's army was annihilated, and Ubayd Allah himself with most of his lieutenants fell. (Brock pp. 65–6)
See also[]
- Al-Mukhtar
- Obaidullah (name)
- Curses in Islam
- Tabarra
- Sahaba
Notes[]
- ↑ The Arab Conquests in Central Asia By H. A. R. Gibb Published by READ BOOKS, 2007 ISBN 1-4067-5239-8, ISBN 978-1-4067-5239-7, pp. 17–19
Bibliography[]
- Brock, Sebastian P. ‘North Mesopotamia in the late Seventh Century: Book XV of John Bar Penkāyē’s Rīš Mellē’. Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam 9 (1987): 51-75. ISSN 0334-4118
- Madelung, Wilferd. ‘ʿAbd Allāh b. al-Zubayr and the Mahdi’. Journal of Near Eastern Studies 40.4 (October 1981): 291-305. ISSN 0022-2968
External links[]
- http://www.answering-ansar.org/answers/muawiya/en/chap11.php
- http://www.grifterrec.com/coins/islam/arab_sas/arabsasanian2.html
- http://www.san.beck.org/AB13-MuhammadandIslam.html
The original article can be found at Ubayd Allah ibn Ziyad and the edit history here.