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Al-Mu'ayyad

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Abbasid prince and governor of Syria (850–861)
This article is about an Abbasid prince. For other uses, see Al-Mu'ayyad (disambiguation).
Al-Mu'ayyad
المؤيد
Governor of Syria
In office
850 – 855
MonarchAl-Mutawakkil
Preceded byMalik ibn Tawk
(847–850)
Succeeded byal-Fath ibn Hakan al-Turki
(856–861)
In office
856 – 861
MonarchAl-Mutawakkil
Deputyal-Fath ibn Hakan al-Turki
Personal details
Born842/844
Samarra, Abbasid Caliphate (now Iraq)
Died866
Samarra, Abbasid Caliphate
Parents
RelativesAl-Muntasir (brother)
Al-Musta'in (cousin)
Al-Mu'tazz (brother)
Al-Muhtadi (cousin)
Al-Mu'tamid (brother)

Ibrahim ibn Jaʽfar al-Mutawakkil (Arabic: ابراهيم بن جعفر المتوكل; died 866), better known by his laqab al-Mu'ayyad (المؤيد, was an Abbasid prince, the third son of the Abbasid caliph al-Mutawakkil, He was the governor of Syria from 850 to 861 and also for a time third-in-line to the Abbasid throne.

Al-Mua'yyad was the brother of al-Muntasir and al-Mu'tazz, who both would eventually become caliphs as well.

Life

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Al-Mu'ayyad was the son of Al-Mutawakkil and his concubine, Umm Ishaq, an Andulasian concubine.[1]

His father, caliph al-Mutawakkil had created a plan of succession that would allow his sons to inherit the caliphate after his death; he would be succeeded first by his eldest son, al-Muntasir, then by al-Mu'tazz and third by al-Mu'ayyad.[2]

In 849, al-Mutawakkil arranged for his succession, by appointing three of his sons as heirs and assigning them the governance and proceeds of the Empire's provinces: the eldest, al-Muntasir, was named first heir, and received governorship of Egypt, the Jazira, and the proceeds of the rents in the capital, Samarra; al-Mu'tazz was charged with supervising the domains of the governor in the Khorasan; and al-Mu'ayyad was placed in charge of Syria.[3]

Al-Mutawakkil had seemed to favour al-Muntasir. However, this appeared to change and al-Muntasir feared his father was going to move against him. With the implicit support of the Turkic faction of the army, he plotted the assassination of al-Mutawakkil which was carried out by a Turkic soldier on December 11, 861.

The Turkic regiments then prevailed on al-Muntasir to remove his brothers from the succession, fearing revenge for the murder of their father. In their place, he was to appoint his son as heir-apparent. On April 27, 862 both brothers, al-Mu'ayyad and al-Mu'tazz, wrote a statement of abdication. During al-Muntasir's short reign (r. 861–862), the Turks convinced him into removing al-Mu'tazz and al-Mu'ayyad from the succession. When al-Muntasir died of unknown causes, the Turkic officers gathered together and decided to install the dead caliph's cousin al-Musta'in (al-Mutawakkil's Nephew) on the throne.[4]

The new caliph was almost immediately faced with a large riot in Samarra in support of the disenfranchised al-Mu'tazz; the rioters were put down by the military but casualties on both sides were heavy. Al-Musta'in, worried that al-Mu'tazz or al-Mua'yyad could press their claims to the caliphate, first attempted to buy them off and then threw them in prison.[5]

In 866, al-Musta'in was deposed and al-Mu'tazz came into power. Immediately upon becoming the new Caliph, al-Mu'tazz had the former Caliph al-Musta'in executed. The Turkish soldiery, after a brawl with the Maghariba troops, now turned their support to al-Mu'ayyad. Enraged by this predicament, the jealous Caliph had his brother, al-Mu'ayyad, being next heir to the throne, imprisoned along with another brother, Abu Ahmad, who had bravely led the troops in the late struggle on his side.

The Turks attempted his release, but al-Mu'tazz, the more alarmed, resolved on his death. He was smothered in a downy robe (or, as others say, frozen in a bed of ice); and the body was then exposed before the Court, as if, being without mark of violence, he had died a natural death, (a transparent subterfuge).

Claim of conversion to Christianity

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This period saw the rise of a legend that an Abbasid prince had converted to Christianity under the influence of Theodore of Edessa, taken the name "John" and been killed for his apostasy; Alexander Vasiliev speculates that Muayyad may have been the convert. However, there is no Christian or Muslim record remotely associating Muayyad with Christianity or even, indeed, religious speculation. The motives for his murder seem to have been purely political; had he indeed converted, it would have given Mutazz an excuse to murder him for apostasy and been recorded.[6] [7]

The genealogy of the Abbasids including their rival Zaydi imams
Abbasids
Mūsā II
ibn ʿAbd Allāh as-Sâlih ibn Mūsā al-Jawn ibn ʿAbd Allāh al-Kāmīl Idrīs ibn Idrīs
(2nd Zaydī Imām of Idrisids in Morocco) Muḥammad
al-Muntasir

(11)
r. 861–862 Ṭalḥa al-Muwaffaq
(Regent)
870–891 Aḥmad
al-Musta'in

(12)
r. 862–866 Muḥammad
al-Muhtadi

(14)
r. 869–870
Muḥammad ibn Yūsūf
Al-Ukhayḍhir

(1st Zaydī Imām of Ukhaydhirites in Najd and Al-Yamama) Abūʾl-Ḥusayn
Al-Hādī ilāʾl-Ḥaqq

Yaḥyā ibn
al-Ḥusayn

(1st Zaydī Imām of Rassids in Yemen) ʿAlī
al-Muktafī

(17)
r. 902–908 Jāʿfar
al-Muqtadir

(18)
r. 908–929,
929–932
Muḥammad
al-Qāhir

(19)
r. 929, 932–934 Jāʿfar al-Mufawwid
(Wali al-Ahd)
875–892
Ismāʿīl ibn Ḥasan ibn Zayd ibn al-Ḥasan al-Mujtabā ʿAlī ibn ʿUmar al-Ashraf ibn ʿAlī Zayn al-ʿĀbidīn Al-Ḥusayn Dhu'l-Dam'a ibn Zayd ibn ʿAlī Zayn al-ʿĀbidīn ʿAbd Allāh
al-Qāʿīm

(26)
r. 1031–1075
Muḥammad ibn Ismāʿīl ibn Ḥasan ibn Zayd Al-Ḥasan ibn ʿAlī ibn ʿUmar al-Ashraf Yaḥyā ibn al-Ḥusayn Dhu'l-Dam'a ibn Zayd Muḥammad Dhakīrat ad-Dīn
(Wali al-Ahd)
1039–1056
Zayd ibn Muḥammad ibn Ismāʿīl ibn Ḥasan ʿAlī ibn al-Ḥasan ibn ʿAlī ibn ʿUmar al-Ashraf ʿUmar ibn Yaḥyā ibn al-Ḥusayn Dhu'l-Dam'a ʿAbd Allāh
al-Mūqtādī

(27)
r. 1075–1094
Al-Mānṣūr
al-Rāshīd

(30)
r. 1135–1136
Muḥammad
al-Mūqtāfī

(31)
r. 1136–1160 Alī ibn al-Faḍl
al-Qabī
Yūsuf
al-Mūstānjīd

(32)
r. 1160–1170 al-Hāsān
ibn Alī
Al-Hāssān
al-Mūstādī'

(33)
r. 1170–1180 Abū Bakr
ibn al-Hāsān
Aḥmad
al-Nāsīr

(34)
r. 1180–1225 Abi 'Alī al-Hāsān ibn Abū Bakr
Al-Mānsūr
al-Mūstānsīr

(36)
r. 1226–1242 Abū'l-Qāsim Aḥmad
al-Mūstānsīr

(1)
r. 1261 Abū'l-ʿAbbās Aḥmad
al-Hakim I

(2)
r. 1262–1302
ʿAbd Allāh
al-Mūstā'sīm

(37)
r. 1242–1258 Abū'r-Rabīʿ Sulaymān
al-Mustakfī I

(3)
r. 1302–1340 Aḥmad ibn Aḥmad
al-Ḥākim bi-amr Allāh
Abū'l-ʿAbbās Aḥmad
al-Hakim II

(5)
r. 1341–1352 Abū'l-Fatḥ Abū Bakr
al-Mu'tadid I

(6)
r. 1352–1362 Abū Isḥāq Ibrāhīm
al-Wāṯiq I

(4)
r. 1340–1341
Abū ʿAbd Allāh Muḥammad
al-Mutawakkil I

(7)
r. 1362–1377,
1377–1383,
1389–1406
Abū Yāḥyā Zakariyāʾ
al-Musta'sim

(8)
r. 1377,
1386–1389
Abū Ḥafs ʿUmar
al-Wāṯiq II

(9)
r. 1383–1386
Abū'l-Faḍl al-ʿAbbās
al-Musta'īn

(10)
r. 1406–1414
Sultan of Egypt
r. 1412
Abū'l-Fatḥ Dāwud
al-Mu'tadīd II

(11)
r. 1414–1441 Abū'r-Rabīʿ Sulaymān
al-Mustakfī II

(12)
r. 1441–1451 Yaʿqūb ibn Muḥammad
al-Mutawakkil ʿalā'Llāh Abū'l-Baqāʾ Ḥamza
al-Qāʾim

(13)
r. 1451–1455 Abū'l-Maḥāsin Yūsuf
al-Mustanjid

(14)
r. 1455–1479
Abū'l-ʿIzz ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz
al-Mutawakkil II

(15)
r. 1479–1497
Abū'ṣ-Ṣabr Yaʿqūb
al-Mustamsik

(16)
r. 1497–1508,
1516–1517
Muḥammad
al-Mutawakkil III

(17)
r. 1508–1516,
1517

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Ibn al-Sāʿī 2017, p. 36.
  2. ^ Bosworth 1993, p. 793.
  3. ^ Kennedy 2004, p. 167.
  4. ^ Bosworth, "Muntasir," p. 583
  5. ^ Saliba (1985) pp. 6-7
  6. ^ "A History of Orthodox Missions Among the Muslims". Yurij Maximov, Russian author and religious studies teacher in the Religious Studies at the Moscow Orthodox Seminary. Archived from the original on 2008年12月06日. Retrieved 2007年08月17日.
  7. ^ Joseph Patrich, The Sabaite Heritage in the Orthodox Church, Peeters Publishers, 2001, ISBN 90-429-0976-5, Google Print, p. 157.

Further reading

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