Appendix 1
121
Tabaqat
of Ibn Sa‘d (d. 845) or the
Ta’rikh madinat Dimashq
of Ibn
‘Asakir (d. 1176), which is a biographical dictionary in spite of its
title. ‘Umar II, unusually, was the subject of an individual early
biographical treatment by Ibn ‘Abd al-Hakam (d. 870).
In works written on the
theme of the Arab conquests
(futuh),
such
as the
Futuh al-buldan
of Baladhuri, the
Futuh Misr
of Ibn ‘Abd al-
Hakam, and the
Kitab al-Futuh
of Ibn A‘tham al-Kufi (fl. early ninth
century) one also finds a wealth of material relevant for Umayyad
history.
Poetry from the period by poets such as Farazdaq and Jarir (both
died about 730) is perhaps not so explicitly informative for
historical purposes as we would like, but the collection of verses and
biographical
information about poets, the
Kitab al-Aghani
by Abu’l-
Faraj al-Isfahani (d. 967), contains much of value for the history of
the period in general.
For the development of the Shi‘a and the Kharijites and the host
of sub-sects, there is a tradition of heresiographical works, in which
the beliefs, practices and main personalities are described. One of
the earliest was the
Maqalat al-islamiyyin
of al-Ash‘ari (d. 935).
One could continue to list
such material for some time, for there
is certainly no shortage of it. Works in these genres and others
continued to be produced by Muslims down to modern times, and
one frequently finds material relevant for the Umayyad period, not
contained in the early writings, in relatively late works. The
problem, as has been stressed, is what reliance is to be placed on
Muslim literary sources in general, sources which from one point of
view
are all secondary, in that they are produced at a late date on the
basis of material which has disappeared, but which are primary in
that we have nothing earlier to give us comparable detail on the
period.
Source material produced in the Umayyad period itself consists
of some literature produced by non-Arabs in languages such as
Syriac and Armenian, coins, inscriptions, buildings and other
artifacts, and the administrative documents
on papyrus which have
survived. On these in general see the ‘Index of sources’ in
M.A.Cook and P. Crone,
Hagarism;
on Syriac sources, S.P.Brock,
‘Syriac sources for seventh century history’; on numismatics,
J.Walker,
Catalogue of the Arab-Byzantine and post-reform
Umaiyad coins,
and
Catalogue of the Arab-Sasanian coins;
for
epigraphy, E.Combe
et al., Répertoire chronologique d’épigraphie
arabe,
Paris 1931 f. provides the inscriptions in transcription
122
Appendix 1
together with French translations and bibliographical references; for
art and architecture, see K.A.C.Cresswell,
Early Muslim
Architecture,
and O.Grabar,
The formation of Islamic art,
New
Haven, Conn., 1973; for an introduction to the literature on
papyrology, see J.Sauvaget’s
Introduction to the history of the
Muslim East,
based on the second edition as recast by Claude Cahen,
Berkeley and Los Angeles 1965, 16–17. This last work is an
invaluable guide to resources (primary and secondary) for Islamic
history in general, and it should be the first port of call for further
information. Chapter 16 is especially relevant for the Umayyads.