70
‘Abd al-Malik and al-Hajjaj
that it was not only the Iraqi soldiery who
had grievances against the
government, and it was the combination of forces against al-Hajjaj
which made the revolt so dangerous. The
participation of the
mawali,
many of whom were included among the
qurra’,
is
associated with a phenomenon which
first becomes important
during the time of al-Hajjaj’s governorship in Iraq—the influx into
the garrison towns of large numbers of
former non-Arab cultivators
who now abandon their lands and attempt to enter Islam by
becoming
the clients
(mawali)
of Arabs in the garrison towns. These
mawali
are to be distinguished from the prisoners of war and others
who had earlier been prominent among the supporters of Mukhtar.
Among their motives in leaving their fields and villages at this
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