78
Factionalism and Islamisation
benefit by accepting Islam? What did ‘Umar do in attempting to
reconcile the rights of the new Muslims
(mawali)
with the revenue
needs of the government? How far were his measures effective and, if
they were not, why not? The difficulties arise because the sources
rarely supply the detailed and precise information we need, or if they
do, the information may relate to only a limited area of the problem or
a part of the Umayyad territories. There is too the danger that the
information represents anachronistic reading back of later conditions
into the time of ‘Umar II. Even the lengthy and quite detailed so-
called ‘Fiscal Rescript of ‘Umar II’ is subject to these remarks. It has
generally been accepted as a copy of a document sent by ‘Umar to his
governors giving them precise instructions on certain questions
concerning taxation and the rights of non-Muslims to accept Islam,
but it is clear from the attempt of H.A.R.Gibb to explicate it that it
leaves a number of issues in doubt, and, in spite of the general
acceptance of its authenticity, its ascription to ‘Umar as a whole can
only be impressionistic and open to question. Like almost all of our
Umayyad ‘documents’, it survives only as part of a later literary
text—there is no archive and we do not have the document itself, if
there was one.
9
If we take first the question of the taxation of non-Muslims and
Muslims in the Umayyad state and the advantages to be hoped for
from acceptance of Islam, it would be fairly easy, in theory at any rate,
to provide an answer if the classical Muslim fiscal system had existed
from the beginning. In this classical system Muslims specifically pay
a religious tax, the
zakat,
which is levied at different rates on different
types of property and wealth. Non-Muslims specifically pay a poll
tax, the
jizya,
payable on the person of each non-Muslim, both as a
sign of their inferior status in the Islamic state and as a return for the
protection which this state offers them. Thirdly there is the
kharaj
.
This is a tax payable equally by Muslims and non-Muslims on land
which is liable for it, generally land which was conquered and became
the property of the Muslim state but which was left under the
cultivation of those who had worked it before its conquest, subject to a
tax which was to be gathered for the benefit of the Muslims as a
whole. When this land changed hands it remained liable for the
kharaj,
no matter what was the religion of its proprietor. In this
system, then, there is likely to be some incentive for the adoption of
Islam by the non-Muslims, so long as the financial burden of the
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