The Umayyad Rise to the Caliphate
33
6. For the attitude of Muslim tradition to the Umayyads, see above, pp.
11–18.
7. See above, pp. 3–4.
8. J.Wellhausen,
Arab kingdom,
introduction; H.A.R.Gibb,
Studies on
the civilization of Islam,
6–8, 39–44; Martin Hinds, ‘Kufan political
alignments and their background in the mid-seventh century A.D.’,
IJMES,
2
(1971);
idem,
‘The murder of the caliph ‘Uthman’,
IJMES,
3 (1972);
M.A.Shaban,
New interpretation,
60–78.
9. Article “Othman’ in
EI1;
for the suggestion that ‘Uthman’s
‘nepotism’ was merely an attempt to ensure that he could maintain control in
the provinces see M. A.Shaban,
New interpretation,
66.
10. Articles “Ali b. Abi Talib’ and ‘Djamal’ in EI2.
11. Articles “Ali b. Abi Talib’ and ‘Adhruh’ in EI2; J.Wellhausen,
Arab
kingdom,
75–112; H.Lammens, ‘Conference de Adroh: Abou Mousa al-
Aš‘ari et ‘Amrou ibn al-‘Asi’ and ‘Assassinat de ‘Ali. Califat ephemère de
Hasan’ in his
Mo‘âwia 1er;
E.L.Petersen,
‘Ali and Mu‘awiya in early Arabic
tradition;
Martin Hinds, ‘The Siffin arbitration agreement’,
JSS,
17 (1972);
M.A.Shaban,
New interpretation,
60–78; G.R.Hawting, ‘The significance of
the slogan
la hukma illa li’llah
and the references to the
hudud
in the
traditions about the Fitna and the murder of ‘Uthman’,
BSOAS,
41 (1978).
12. H.A.R.Gibb,
Studies on the civilisation of Islam,
7; N.A.Faris,
‘Development in Arab historiography as reflected in the struggle between
‘Ali and Mu‘awiya’ in B.Lewis and P.M.Holt (eds.),
Historians of the
Middle East,
435–41.
34
Chapter 3
The Sufyanids
Mu‘awiya was the first of three caliphs
from the Sufyanid branch of
the Umayyad family, so called after Abu Sufyan. The Umayyad
family was, indeed, very extensive and was made up of several
branches often hostile to each other and competing for wealth and
prestige. With the death of the Mu‘awiya’s grandson, the caliph
Mu‘awiya II, in 684, the Sufyanids were to provide no further
caliphs and, as a result of the civil war which erupted even before
the death of Mu‘awiya II, they were supplanted
in the caliphate by
the Marwanid line of Umayyads descended from Marwan b. al-
Hakam.
1
After the Umayyad dynasty had been overthrown and the
‘Abbasids took over the caliphate in 750, the Sufyanid branch again
achieved some prominence for a time. During the first century or so
of ‘Abbasid rule a number of political and religious movements
developed in Syria which had a strong messianic character and
looked for the coming of a figure who would overthrow the
‘Abbasids and reestablish Syrian glory. This figure was known as
the Sufyani and was expected to be descended
from the line which
had produced the great Mu‘awiya. It is as if the Sufyanid period of
Umayyad history had come to be regarded as of special significance
and something like a Golden Age for Syria.
2
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: