Template:Short description Template:Infobox royalty Sulayman ibn Abd al-Malik ibn Marwan (Template:Langx, Template:CircaTemplate:Snd24 September 717) was the seventh Umayyad caliph, ruling from 715 until his death. He was the son of Caliph Abd al-Malik ibn Marwan (r. 685–705) and Wallada bint al-Abbas. He began his career as governor of Palestine, while his father Abd al-Malik (Template:Reign) and brother al-Walid I (Template:Reign) reigned as caliphs. There, the theologian Raja ibn Haywa al-Kindi mentored him, and he forged close ties with Yazid ibn al-Muhallab, a major opponent of al-Hajjaj ibn Yusuf, al-Walid's powerful viceroy of Iraq and the eastern Caliphate. Sulayman resented al-Hajjaj's influence over his brother. As governor, Sulayman founded the city of Ramla and built the White Mosque in it. The new city superseded Lydda as the district capital of Palestine. Lydda was at least partly destroyed and its inhabitants may have been forcibly relocated to Ramla, which developed into an economic hub, became home to many Muslim scholars, and remained the commercial and administrative center of Palestine until the 11th century.

After acceding as caliph, Sulayman dismissed his predecessor's governors and generals. Many had been handpicked by al-Hajjaj and had led the war efforts which brought the Caliphate to its greatest territorial extent. Among them were the conqueror of Transoxiana (Central Asia), Qutayba ibn Muslim, who was killed by his own troops in an abortive revolt in anticipation of his dismissal, and the conqueror of Sind (the western Indian subcontinent), Muhammad ibn al-Qasim, who was executed. In the west, Sulayman deposed Musa ibn Nusayr, the conqueror of the Iberian Peninsula (al-Andalus) and governor of Ifriqiya (central North Africa), and had his son Abd al-Aziz, governor of al-Andalus, assassinated. Although he continued his predecessors' militarist policies, expansion largely stopped under Sulayman, partly due to effective resistance along the Central Asian frontiers and the collapse of Arab military leadership and organization there after Qutayba's death. Sulayman's appointee over the eastern Caliphate, his confidant Yazid, invaded the southern Caspian coast in 716, but withdrew and settled for a tributary arrangement after being defeated by the local Iranian rulers. Sulayman intensified the war with the Byzantine Empire, the primary focus of his war efforts, culminating in the 717–718 siege of Constantinople, which ended in a disastrous Arab defeat.

Sulayman died in Dabiq during the siege. His eldest son and chosen successor, Ayyub, had predeceased him. Sulayman made the unconventional choice of nominating his cousin, Umar, as caliph, rather than a son or a brother. The siege of Constantinople and the coinciding of his reign with the approaching centennial of the Hijra (start of the Islamic calendar), led contemporary Arab poets to view Sulayman in messianic terms.

Early lifeEdit

The details about Sulayman's first thirty years of life in the medieval sources are scant.Template:Sfn He was likely born in Medina around 675.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn His father, Abd al-Malik ibn Marwan, belonged to the Umayyad clan of the Quraysh tribe, while his mother, Wallada bint al-Abbas ibn al-Jaz, was a great-granddaughter of Zuhayr ibn Jadhima,Template:Sfn a prominent 6th-century chieftain of the Arab tribe of Banu Abs.Template:Sfn Sulayman was partly raised in the desert by his Banu Abs kinsmen.Template:Sfn

At the time of his birth, the Caliphate was ruled by Sulayman's distant cousin, Mu'awiya I,Template:Sfn who had founded the ruling Umayyad dynasty in 661.Template:Sfn Following the deaths of Mu'awiya I's successors, Yazid I and Mu'awiya II, in 683 and 684, Umayyad authority collapsed across the Caliphate and most provinces recognized the non-Umayyad, Mecca-based, Abd Allah ibn al-Zubayr, as caliph.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Umayyads of Medina, including Sulayman, were therefore expelled from the city and became refugees in Syria,Template:Sfn where they were supported by loyalist Arab tribes.Template:Sfn These tribes elected Sulayman's grandfather, Marwan I, as caliph and formed the Yaman confederation in opposition to the Qaysi tribes, who dominated northern Syria and the Jazira (Upper Mesopotamia) and supported Ibn al-Zubayr.Template:Sfn By 685, Marwan had reestablished Umayyad control over Syria and Egypt.Template:Sfn Abd al-Malik, who succeeded him, had by 692 reconquered the rest of the Caliphate.Template:Sfn

Governorship of PalestineEdit

File:Syria in the 9th century.svg
Administrative divisions of Islamic Syria. Sulayman was governor of the military district of Filastin (Palestine).

At an unknown date, Abd al-Malik appointed Sulayman governor of Jund Filastin (the military district of Palestine), a post Abd al-Malik formerly held under Marwan.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Sulayman's appointment followed stints by the Caliph's uncle, Yahya ibn al-Hakam, and half-brother, Aban ibn Marwan.Template:Sfn In 701, Sulayman led the Hajj rituals in Mecca.Template:Sfn Before Abd al-Malik died in 705, he nominated his eldest son, al-Walid I, as his successor, to be followed by Sulayman.Template:Sfn Sulayman remained governor of Palestine throughout al-Walid's reign, which lasted until 715.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn His governorship likely brought him in close contact with the Yamani chieftains who dominated the district.Template:Sfn He established a strong relationship with Raja ibn Haywa al-Kindi, a local, Yamani-affiliated religious scholar who had previously supervised the construction of Abd al-Malik's Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem.Template:Sfn Raja became Sulayman's tutor and senior aide.Template:Sfn

Sulayman resented the influence of al-Hajjaj ibn Yusuf, the viceroy of Iraq and the eastern parts of the Caliphate, over al-Walid,Template:Sfn and cultivated ties with his opponents.Template:Sfn In 708 or 709, he gave refuge to the fugitive and former governor of Khurasan, Yazid ibn al-Muhallab, and his family, the Muhallabids. Al-Hajjaj had dismissed and imprisoned Yazid but he had escaped to Palestine.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn There, Yazid used his tribal connections with the district's large Yamani Azdi population to gain Sulayman's protection.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Al-Walid was angered with Yazid's defiance of al-Hajjaj, so Sulayman offered to pay the fine al-Hajjaj had imposed on Yazid. He also sent the latter and his own son, Ayyub, in shackles to the Caliph, with a letter pleading for the Muhallabids' pardon, which the Caliph granted.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Yazid became a close confidant of Sulayman, who held him in "the highest regard", according to a report by the historian Hisham ibn al-Kalbi (737–819).Template:Sfn Hisham further noted "Yazid ... stayed with him [Sulayman], teaching him how to dress well, making delicious dishes for him, and giving him large presents".Template:Sfn Yazid remained with Sulayman for nine months, or until al-Hajjaj died in 714, and highly influenced and prejudiced him against al-Hajjaj.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Foundation of RamlaEdit

File:Flickr - …trialsanderrors - View from Tower of the Forty Martyrs, Ramleh, Holy Land, ca. 1895.jpg
Ramla (pictured in 1895) was founded by Sulayman at the start of the 8th century and became the capital of his caliphate.

As governor, Sulayman founded the city of Ramla as the seat of his administration,Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn replacing Lydda, the Muslims' original provincial capitalTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn and Sulayman's first residence in Palestine.Template:Sfn Ramla remained the capital of Palestine through the Fatimid period (10th–11th centuries).Template:Sfn His motives for founding Ramla were personal ambition and practical considerations.Template:Sfn The location of Lydda, a long-established and prosperous city, was logistically and economically advantageous. Sulayman established his capital outside of the city proper.Template:Sfn According to the historian Nimrod Luz, this was likely due to a lack of available space for wide-scale development and agreements dating to the Muslim conquest in the 630s that, at least formally, precluded him from confiscating desirable property within the city.Template:Sfn In a tradition recorded by the historian Ibn Fadlallah al-Umari (d. 1347), a determined local Christian cleric refused Sulayman's requests for plots in the middle of Lydda. Infuriated, he attempted to have the cleric executed, but Raja dissuaded him and instead proposed building a new city at a superior, adjacent site.Template:Sfn The historian Moshe Sharon holds that Lydda was "too Christian in ethos for the taste of the Umayyad rulers", particularly following the Arabization and Islamization reforms instituted by Abd al-Malik.Template:Sfn According to al-Jahshiyari (d. 942), Sulayman sought a lasting reputation as a great builder following the example of his father and al-Walid, the respective founders of the Dome of the Rock and Great Mosque of Damascus.Template:Sfn The construction of Ramla was his "way to immortality" and "his personal stamp on the landscape of Palestine", according to Luz.Template:Sfn In choosing the site, Sulayman utilized the strategic advantages of Lydda's vicinity while avoiding the physical constraints of an already-established urban center.Template:Sfn

File:PikiWiki Israel 41123 White Mosque Ramla.JPG
Remains of the White Mosque in Ramla (pictured in 2014) built by Sulayman and his cousin and successor Umar ibn Abd al-Aziz

The first structure Sulayman erected in Ramla was his palatial residence,Template:Sfn which dually served as the seat of Palestine's administration (Template:Transliteration).Template:Sfn At the center of the new city was a congregational mosque, later known as the White Mosque.Template:Sfn It was not completed until the reign of Caliph Umar ibn Abd al-Aziz (Template:Reign).Template:Sfn From early on, Ramla developed economically as a market town for the surrounding area's agricultural products, and as a center for dyeing, weaving and pottery. It was also home to many Muslim religious scholars.Template:Sfn Sulayman built an aqueduct in the city called al-Barada, which transported water to Ramla from Tel Gezer, about Template:Convert to the southeast.Template:Sfn Ramla superseded Lydda as the commercial center of Palestine.Template:Sfn Many of Lydda's Christian, Samaritan and Jewish inhabitants were moved to the new city.Template:Sfn Although the traditional accounts are in agreement that Lydda almost immediately fell into obscurity following the founding of Ramla, narratives vary about the extent of Sulayman's efforts to transfer Lydda's inhabitants to Ramla, some holding that he only demolished a church in Lydda and others that he demolished the city altogether.Template:Sfn Al-Ya'qubi (d. 839) noted Sulayman razed the houses of Lydda's inhabitants to force their relocation to Ramla and punished those who resisted.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In the words of al-Jahshiyari, Sulayman "founded the town of al-Ramla and its mosque and thus caused the ruin of Lod [Lydda]".Template:Sfn

Jerusalem, located Template:Convert southeast of Ramla,Template:Sfn remained the region's religious focal point.Template:Sfn According to an 8th-century Arabic source,Template:Sfn Sulayman ordered the construction of several public buildings there, including a bathhouse, at the same time that al-Walid was developing the Temple Mount (Haram al-Sharif).Template:Sfn The bathhouse was used for ablution by Muslims worshipping at the Dome of the Rock.Template:Sfn Sulayman is further credited by an anonymous 13th-century Syriac chronicler for building arches, mills and gardens in Jericho, but these were later destroyed by floods.Template:Sfn He also maintained an agricultural tract near Qutayfa, in the environs of Damascus, that was called "al-Sulaymaniyya" after him.Template:Sfn

CaliphateEdit

AccessionEdit

In 714, al-Walid, encouraged or supported by al-Hajjaj, attempted to install his son Abd al-Aziz as his successor, voiding the arrangements set by Abd al-Malik, which made Sulayman heir apparent.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn According to the historian Umar ibn Shabba (d. 878), al-Walid offered Sulayman generous financial incentives to agree to the change, but he refused.Template:Sfn Al-Walid, nonetheless, issued requests to his provincial governors to recognize Abd al-Aziz, but only received favorable responses from al-Hajjaj and Qutayba ibn Muslim, the governor of Khurasan and conqueror of Transoxiana.Template:Sfn An adviser of al-Walid, Abbad ibn Ziyad, counseled the Caliph to pressure Sulayman by summoning him to the Caliph's court in Damascus, and then, after Sulayman stalled in his response, to mobilize his Template:Transliteration (select troops) and move against Sulayman in Ramla.Template:Sfn Al-Walid died shortly after, on 24 February 715.Template:Sfn Sulayman received the news at his estate in al-Sab' (Bayt Jibrin),Template:Sfn and acceded to the caliphate unopposed.Template:Sfn

Sulayman obtained oaths of allegiance in Ramla,Template:Sfn and in Damascus during his only recorded visit to that city.Template:Sfn He continued to govern from Palestine, where he "was much beloved", in the words of the historian Julius Wellhausen, instead of Damascus,Template:Sfn the Umayyads' traditional administrative capital.Template:Sfn The historian Reinhard Eisener asserted that the medieval "Syrian sources prove he obviously chose Jerusalem as his principal seat of government",Template:Sfn while Wellhausen and the historian Hugh N. Kennedy held that he remained in Ramla.Template:Sfn

Provincial politicsEdit

In his first year in office, Sulayman replaced most of al-Walid's and al-Hajjaj's provincial appointees with governors loyal to him.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn It is unclear whether these changes were the result of resentment and suspicion toward previous opponents of his accession, a means to ensure control over the provinces by appointing loyal officials, or a policy to end the rule of strong, old-established governors.Template:Sfn While Eisener argued Sulayman's "choice of governors does not give the impression of bias" toward the Yaman faction,Template:Sfn Kennedy asserted that the Caliph's reign marked the political comeback of the Yaman and "reflected his Yamani leanings".Template:Sfn One of his immediate decisions was to install his confidant, Yazid ibn al-Muhallab, as governor of Iraq.Template:Sfn According to the historian Muhammad Abdulhayy Shaban, Sulayman considered Yazid to be his "own al-Hajjaj".Template:Sfn Yazid acted with a staunch preference for the Yaman, but according to Wellhausen, there is no indication that Sulayman favored one faction over the other.Template:Sfn Wellhausen held that Sulayman, from the time he was governor of Palestine, "may have been persuaded" that the rule of al-Hajjaj engendered hatred among the Iraqis toward the Umayyads rather than fostering their loyalty.Template:Sfn Sulayman thus opposed him and his influence and deposed his appointees and allies, not because of their Qaysi affiliation, but because of their personal connection with al-Hajjaj.Template:Sfn Sulayman kept close ties with the Qaysi troops of the Jazira.Template:Sfn

A protege of al-Hajjaj, Qutayba ibn Muslim, whose relations with Sulayman had been antagonistic, was confirmed in his post by the Caliph, but remained wary that his dismissal was pending.Template:Sfn At the time of Sulayman's accession, he had been leading his troops on an expedition toward the Jaxartes valley in Transoxiana. While stopping in Ferghana, he declared a rebellion against Sulayman, but most of his troops, exhausted by the constant campaigns into distant lands, turned against him.Template:Sfn Qutayba was killed by an army faction led by Waki ibn Abi Sud al-Tamimi in August 715.Template:Sfn Waki declared himself governor of Khurasan, and was confirmed by Sulayman, but the latter restricted his authority to military affairs.Template:Sfn Sulayman was concerned that Waki's nomination by the tribal factions of the Khurasani army (rather than by his own initiative) would lead to instability in the province.Template:Sfn Meanwhile, al-Hajjaj's kinsman and leader of the conquest of Sind, Muhammad ibn al-Qasim, did not revolt against Sulayman, but was nonetheless dismissed, summoned to Wasit, and tortured to death.Template:Sfn

File:Coin of the Umayyad Caliphate, minted in al-Hind (probably Multan).jpg
Dirham of the Umayyad Caliphate, minted in the caliphal province of Sind (probably at Multan), and dated 97 AH/ 715–16 CE: the obverse circular legend reads "In the name of Allah, struck this dirham in al-Hind (India in Abd al-Malik al-Hind coin 715 CE) in the year seven and ninety".

Waki's provisional governorship lasted nine months,Template:Sfn ending in mid-716.Template:Sfn Yazid had persuaded Sulayman that Waki was a troublesome Bedouin (Arab nomad) lacking administrative qualities.Template:Sfn Khurasan, along with the other eastern parts of the Caliphate, were attached to Yazid's Iraqi governorship.Template:Sfn The Caliph directed Yazid to relocate to Khurasan and leave lieutenant governors in the Iraqi garrison towns of Kufa, Basra and Wasit, while entrusting Iraq's fiscal affairs to his own appointee, a Template:Transliteration (pl. Template:Transliteration; non-Arab freedman or client) with lengthy experience in the province, Salih ibn Abd al-Rahman.Template:Sfn

Between 715 and 716, Sulayman dismissed Khalid ibn Abdallah al-Qasri and Uthman ibn Hayyan al-Murri, the respective governors of Mecca and Medina, both of whom owed their appointments to al-Hajjaj.Template:Sfn Khalid, later considered a champion of the Yaman,Template:Sfn was replaced by an Umayyad family member, Sulayman's brother-in-law Abd al-Aziz ibn Abdallah ibn Khalid ibn Asid.Template:Sfn

In the west, Sulayman dismissed Musa ibn Nusayr, the Yamani-affiliated governor of Ifriqiya and conqueror of Hispania (al-Andalus), and his son Abd al-Aziz, the governor of al-Andalus.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Musa was imprisoned by Sulayman upon his accession and Abd al-Aziz was assassinated on Sulayman's orders in March 716. The assassination order was carried out by some of the leading Arab commanders in al-Andalus, including Abd al-Aziz's top lieutenant Habib ibn Abi Ubayd al-Fihri.Template:Sfn Al-Tabari held that Habib delivered Abd al-Aziz's head to the Caliph.Template:Sfn Sulayman installed a Template:Transliteration of the Quraysh in place of Musa, and under his order, the new governor confiscated the wealth of Musa's family in Ifriqiya and had them tortured and killed.Template:Sfn Musa had a history of embezzling funds during his career and Sulayman extorted considerable sums from him during his imprisonment.Template:Sfn

War effortsEdit

File:Map of the Caliphate in 945.svg
A map of the northern regions of the Caliphate. The area shaded in light brown depicts the expansion into Tabaristan and Jurjan along the southern Caspian coast during Sulayman's reign. The areas shaded in lime green, pink, purple, yellow and orange depict areas conquered under Sulayman's predecessors.

Although he largely replaced their governors, Sulayman maintained his predecessors' militarist policies. Nonetheless, during his relatively short reign, the territorial expansion of the Caliphate that occurred under al-Walid virtually came to a halt.Template:Sfn

TransoxianaEdit

On the eastern front, in Transoxiana, further conquests were not achieved for a quarter century after Qutayba's death, during which time the Arabs began to lose territory in the region.Template:Sfn Sulayman ordered the withdrawal of the Khurasani army from Ferghana to Merv, and its subsequent disbandment.Template:Sfn No military activity was carried out under Waki. Under Yazid's deputy in Transoxiana, his son Mukhallad, expeditions were limited to summertime raids against Sogdian villages. The historian H. A. R. Gibb attributed the Arab military regression in Transoxiana to the void in leadership and organization left by Qutayba's death.Template:Sfn Eisener partly attributed it to more effective resistance along the frontiers. The halt in the conquests was not an indication that "the impulse of expansion and conquest slackened" under Sulayman, according to Eisener.Template:Sfn

Jurjan and TabaristanEdit

In 716, Yazid attempted to conquer the principalities of Jurjan and Tabaristan, located along the southern coast of the Caspian Sea. Ruled by local Iranian dynasties and shielded by the Alborz Mountains, these regions had remained largely independent of Muslim rule, despite repeated attempts to subdue them.Template:Sfn The campaign lasted for four months and involved a 100,000-strong army derived from the garrisons of Kufa, Basra, Rayy, Merv and Syria.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn It marked the first deployment of Syrian troops, the elite military faction of the Caliphate, to Khurasan.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Yazid defeated the Chöl Turks north of the river Atrek, and secured control of Jurjan by founding a city there (modern Gonbad-e Kavus).Template:Sfn In a letter, Yazid congratulated Sulayman on the conquests of the two territories, which had eluded previous caliphs until "God made this conquest on behalf" of Sulayman.Template:Sfn Yazid's initial success was reversed by Tabaristan's ruler, Farrukhan the Great, and his coalition from neighboring Daylam, Gilan, and Jurjan in later confrontations that year. Afterward, Yazid withdrew Muslim troops from the region in return for a tributary arrangement with Farrukhan.Template:Sfn Tabaristan remained independent of Arab rule until 760, when it was conquered by the Abbasids, the successors of the Umayyads,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn but remained a restive province dominated by local dynasts.Template:Sfn

Siege of ConstantinopleEdit

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File:Asia Minor ca 740 AD.svg
Map of Byzantine Asia Minor and Thrace in the early 8th century

The Caliph's principal military focus was the perennial war with Byzantium,Template:Sfn which was not only the largest, richest, and strongest of the Caliphate's enemies, but also directly adjacent to Syria, the center of Umayyad power.Template:Sfn The Umayyads' first attack on the Byzantine capital, Constantinople, under Mu'awiya I had failed.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn Nevertheless, from 692 onwards, the Umayyads had been on the offensive, secured control of Armenia and the Caucasian principalities, and gradually encroached upon the borderlands of the empire. Umayyad generals, often members of the ruling family, raided Byzantine territory every year, capturing towns and fortresses.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Aided by a prolonged period of instability in Byzantium,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn by 712, the Byzantine defensive system began to show signs of collapse, as Arab raids penetrated ever deeper into Asia Minor.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

File:47-manasses-chronicle.jpg
A 14th-century illustration of the siege of Constantinople

Following the death of al-Walid I, Sulayman took up the project to capture Constantinople with increased vigor.Template:Sfn In late 716, upon returning from the Hajj pilgrimage to Mecca, Sulayman encamped and mobilized his army in Dabiq in northern Syria.Template:Sfn From there, he oversaw the massive war effort against the Byzantines.Template:Sfn Being too ill to lead the campaign in person,Template:Sfn he dispatched his half-brother Maslama ibn Abd al-Malik to besiege the Byzantine capital from the land, with orders to remain until the city was conquered or he was recalled by the Caliph.Template:Sfn Already from early 716, the Arab commander Umar ibn Hubayra al-Fazari had launched a parallel naval campaign against Constantinople.Template:Sfn While many troops were dispatched toward the Byzantine capital, Sulayman appointed his son Dawud to lead a summer campaign against the Byzantine frontier in 717,Template:Sfn during which he captured Hisn al-Mar'a ("the Woman's Fortress") near Malatya.Template:Sfn

Sulayman's efforts ultimately failed.Template:Sfn The Byzantines repulsed the Umayyad fleet from Constantinople in the summer of 717, while Maslama's army maintained its siege of the city.Template:Sfn Umayyad fleets sent in the summer of 718 to aid the besiegers were destroyed by the Byzantines, while an Umayyad relief army was routed and repulsed in Anatolia.Template:Sfn Having failed in the siege, Maslama's army withdrew from Constantinople in August 718.Template:Sfn The massive losses incurred during the campaign led to a partial retrenchment of the Umayyad forces from the captured Byzantine frontier districts,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn but already in 720, Umayyad raids against Byzantium recommenced. Nevertheless, the goal of conquering Constantinople was effectively abandoned, and the frontier between the two empires stabilized along the line of the Taurus and Anti-Taurus Mountains, over which both sides continued to launch regular raids and counter-raids during the next centuries.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Death and successionEdit

Sulayman died in Dabiq in September 717,Template:Sfn and was buried there.Template:Sfn The 11th-century Nestorian Christian chronicler Elias of Nisibis dated his death to 20 September or 21 September, while the 8th-century Muslim historian Abu Mikhnaf placed it on 23 September or 24 September.Template:Sfn He fell ill after returning from the Friday prayers and died a few days later.Template:Sfn

Sulayman designated his eldest son Ayyub as his successor in 715 or 716, after the death of his brother and potential successor, Marwan al-Akbar.Template:Sfn The order is partly corroborated by an ode from the contemporary poet Jarir:

The Imam, whose gifts will be hoped for, after the Imam [Sulayman], is the chosen successor, Ayyub ... You [Ayyub] are the successor to the merciful one [Sulayman], the one whom the people who recite the Psalms recognize, the one whose name is inscribed in the Torah.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn

But Ayyub died in early 717,Template:Sfn succumbing to the so-called Template:Transliteration ("plague of the Notables"), that afflicted Syria and Iraq.Template:Sfn The same plague may have caused Sulayman's death.Template:Sfn On his deathbed, Sulayman considered nominating his other son Dawud, but Raja advised against it, arguing that Dawud was away fighting in Constantinople and that it was unclear if he was still alive.Template:Sfn Raja counseled Sulayman to choose his paternal cousin and adviser, Umar ibn Abd al-Aziz, describing him as a "worthy, excellent man and a sincere Muslim".Template:Sfn To avoid potential intra-dynastic strife between Umar and Sulayman's brothers, Yazid ibn Abd al-Malik was appointed Umar's successor.Template:Sfn Sulayman's nomination of Umar over his own brothers defied the general assumptions among the Umayyad family that the office of the caliph would be restricted to the household of Abd al-Malik.Template:Sfn Raja was chosen to execute Sulayman's will and secured allegiance to Umar from the Caliph's brothers by threatening them with the use of force, following their protestations at being bypassed.Template:Sfn According to Eisener, Raja's personal connections to the traditional Muslim reports about Sulayman's nomination of Umar render Raja's role in the succession arrangements as "likely ... exaggerated".Template:Sfn According to Shaban, Sulayman nominated Umar because he was the contender "most sympathetic to his policies".Template:Sfn

Assessment and legacyEdit

According to Eisener, it is challenging "to form an appropriate picture of Sulayman's reign", due to its short duration.Template:Sfn Shaban held that Sulayman's short rule would "permit more than one interpretation", which is the reason "he is such an ambiguous figure for the historian."Template:Sfn Shaban has noted that the "importance of Sulayman's reign does not seem to have been realized" due to the medieval sources' "overwhelming emphasis" on the reign of his successor, Umar ibn Abd al-Aziz.Template:Sfn While Shaban and Kennedy have emphasized Sulayman's championing of the Yaman faction and opposition to the Qays,Template:Sfn Eisener has viewed his provincial and military appointments as motivated by a desire to consolidate his control over the Caliphate by installing loyalists in positions of power, factional affiliations notwithstanding.Template:Sfn Eisener and Shaban have noted that Sulayman generally maintained the expansionist policies of al-Walid and Abd al-Malik.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

While Shaban has highlighted Sulayman's attempts to further integrate the Template:Transliteration into the military hierarchy,Template:Sfn the historian Patricia Crone has rejected that Sulayman oversaw any policy change regarding their integration.Template:Sfn Several Islamic traditional sources credited Sulayman for reversing al-Hajjaj's measures against non-Arab, Muslim converts by allowing the return to Basra of either the urban Template:Transliteration who had supported the anti-Umayyad revolt of Ibn al-Ash'ath in 700–701, or the Iraqi peasants who converted to Islam and moved to Basra to avoid the Template:Transliteration (poll tax designated for non-Muslims). Crone has viewed the traditional accounts of Sulayman's policies regarding the runaway peasant converts as "badly attested".Template:Sfn

In the panegyrics of Sulayman's contemporary poets, al-Farazdaq and Jarir, Sulayman is viewed in messianic terms as the Mahdi ("rightly guided one") sent to restore justice after a period of oppression.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Al-Farazdaq praised Sulayman for addressing all grievances and heralded him as the one "predicted by priests and rabbis".Template:Sfn The messianic views of Sulayman may have been connected to the approaching centennial of the Hijrah and the associated Muslim hopes for the conquest of Constantinople during his reign.Template:Sfn Several hadiths (sayings or traditions attributed to Muhammad) associated the conquest of the city with the Mahdi and Sulayman entered the role in his attempt to conquer it.Template:Sfn "Sensibly", according to Crone, Sulayman did not publicly reference the widespread belief among Muslims that their community or the world would be destroyed on the centennial.Template:Sfn

Sulayman was known to lead a licentious life and the traditional sources hold that he was gluttonous and promiscuous.Template:Sfn Al-Ya'qubi described him as "a voracious eater ... attractive and eloquent ... a tall man, white, and with a body that could not bear hunger".Template:Sfn He was highly skilled in Arabic oratory.Template:Sfn Despite his lifestyle, his political sympathies laid with the pious, chiefly evidenced by his deference to Raja's counsel.Template:Sfn He also cultivated ties to the religious opponents of al-Hajjaj in Iraq. He was financially generous toward the Alids (the closest surviving kinsmen of the Islamic prophet Muhammad). He installed as governor of Medina Abu Bakr ibn Muhammad al-Ansari, a member of the city's pious circles, despite his family's role in the fatal rebellion against the early clansman and patron of the Umayyads, Caliph Uthman (Template:Reign), revenge for whom had served as an ideological rallying point and foundational event for the Umayyad dynasty.Template:Sfn In contrast to contemporary poetry, the Islamic tradition considers Sulayman to have been cruel and unjust, his overtures to the pious stemming from the guilt of his immoral conduct.Template:Sfn

FamilyEdit

Sulayman had four wives from different branches of the Umayyad family.Template:Sfn Among them was Ayyub's mother, Umm Aban bint Aban, a granddaughter of al-Hakam ibn Abi al-As, the father of Marwan I.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Another of his Umayyad wives was Umm Yazid bint Abd Allah, a granddaughter of Caliph Yazid I and sister of the future pretender to the caliphate, Abu Muhammad al-Sufyani.Template:Sfn She was the mother of Sulayman's sons Yazid, al-Qasim, and Sa'id. Sulayman's wife A'isha bint Abd Allah ibn Amr was a great-granddaughter of Caliph Uthman (Template:Reign) and mother to Sulayman's sons Yahya and Abd Allah.Template:Sfn He was also married to Umm Amr, a daughter of Abd Allah ibn Khalid ibn Asid, from whom he had his sons Abd al-Wahid,Template:Sfn the future governor of Medina and Mecca under Caliph Marwan II (Template:Reign),Template:Sfn and Abd al-Aziz.Template:Sfn

Among his other wives were Su'da bint Yahya, a granddaughter of Talha ibn Ubayd Allah, who was a senior companion of Muhammad and an early Muslim leader,Template:Sfn and A'isha bint Asma bint Abd al-Rahman ibn al-Harith, a member of the prominent Qurayshite clan of Banu Makhzum, who bore him two sons.Template:Sfn From his slave concubines, Sulayman had his sons Dawud, Muhammad, al-Harith, Umar, and Abd al-Rahman,Template:Sfn the last of whom died a child.Template:Sfn In all, Sulayman had fourteen sons.Template:Sfn Muhammad, who was twelve years old at the time of his father's death, was the eldest to have survived him and lived to the reign of Caliph al-Walid II (Template:Reign).Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Sulayman's sons remained in Palestine and maintained strong ties with the district's Yamani tribal nobility.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Arab tribes which formed Palestine's garrison were committed to the family. In 744, they unsuccessfully attempted to install its head, Sulayman's son Yazid, as caliph.Template:Sfn Sulayman's property in Palestine remained in his family's possession until the Abbasid Revolution toppled the Umayyad dynasty in 750,Template:Sfn after which they were confiscated by the Abbasid family.Template:Sfn Some of his descendants, from the lines of Dawud and Abd al-Wahid, were recorded by the sources living in the Umayyad emirate (756–929) and caliphate (929–1031) of al-Andalus.Template:Sfn

NotesEdit

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ReferencesEdit

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