Qādisiyyah in modern Middle Eastern discourse

D Gershon Lewental, DGLnotes, 21 November 2005

Depiction of the Battle of al-Qādisiyyah from a manuscript of the Persian epic Shāh-nāmeh.
Depiction of the Battle of al-Qādisiyyah from a manuscript of the Persian epic Shāh-nāmeh. [1]
The Battle of al-Qādisiyyah (Ar. Maʿrakat al-Qādisiyyah or معركة القادسية; also spelled Qadisiyya, Qadesiyyah, Kadisiya, Ghadesia, etc.) was a decisive engagement during the Arab-Muslim conquest of Iran in the mid-630s. Since the days in which the Arab warriors engaged and defeated the imperial army of Sāsānian Iran near al-Qādisiyyah, countless generations have preserved and retold the history of that event which took place on the plains between the Arabian Desert and a branch of the Euphrates River, between the arid home of the nomadic Arab tribes united recently by Islam and the lush, rich alluvium of Mesopotamia, where Iranian kings had established themselves not far from Biblical Babylon, and between—as some would later suggest—barbarism and civilisation. Inevitably, the passage of time has encompassed the original narrative, leading to its embellishment and even distortion at the hands of story-tellers (Ar. qāṣṣ, pl. quṣṣāṣ), traditionists (Ar. akhbāriyyūn), historians, and political leaders. Around the historic kernel of the battle, a legend has developed over the centuries, comprising a large body of literature full of topoi. Juxtaposing details such as the size of the forces and mention of the clash in non-Muslim annals suggests that the current perception of al-Qādisiyyah is but a pale shadow of the original event. In this manner, the Battle of al-Qādisiyyah highlights the significant function of history and memory in the modern Middle East. The evocation of this battle by Ṣaddām Ḥusayn (Saddam Hussein) during the Iran-Iraq War and currently by radical Islamists exemplify well the continuing emotive power of this ancient engagement.

Table of contents

1. The Traditional account

Ruins of the royal palace (Ayvān-e Khosrow) in Madāʾin (Ctesiphon), the Sāsānian capital.
Ruins of the royal palace (Ayvān-e Khosrow) in Madāʾin (Ctesiphon), the Sāsānian capital. [2]
Already in the last years of the life of Muḥammad, raids set out against the Sāsānian and Byzantine Empires. Although these expeditions slowed during the consolidation of the Arabian peninsula under the first Caliph Abū Bakr aṣ-Ṣiddīq (r. 632–634), during the Wars of Apostasy (Ar. riddah), the latter’s successor ʿUmar b. al-Khaṭṭāb (r. 634–644) turned his attention northwards, initiating the Arab conquests. ʿUmar had received reports concerning both the instability of the Sāsānian régime, rocked by a succession crisis, and attempts by the Persian sovereigns to restore order along their south-western border following a series of successful raids by Arab tribes under the leadership of a charismatic local chieftain. Consequently, he sent an organised army to build upon those gains, but it experienced a rare defeat during the Arab-Muslim conquests at the Battle of the Bridge (Ar. al-Jisr), which appeared to have ended the momentum and destroyed the Muslim force. It may have even ended the threat to Iran had the Persians capitalised upon their victory, but further dynastic disputes hampered such efforts. Ultimately, ʿUmar decided to despatch a much larger Arab force towards Iraq under the control of an important member of the Quraysh tribe and a respected Companion Saʿd b. Abī Waqqāṣ, one of the early converts to Islam and a maternal uncle of Muḥammad.

1.1 Buildup to the battle

Map of the strategic position of al-Qādisiyyah.
Map of the strategic position of al-Qādisiyyah. [3]
In the meanwhile, word reached the Sāsānian capital of al-Madāʾin (Ctesiphon-Seleucia) of the approach of this enlarged Arab-Muslim force, which had established camp on the edge of the empire, near the town of al-Qādisiyyah, on the western bank of the Euphrates River, near the city of al-Ḥīrah. The young newly-enthroned monarch Yazdegerd III (r. 632?–651) ordered the powerful nobleman and commander of the Sāsānian army, Rostam b. Farrokh-Hormozd, to gather a massive army and to march forthwith to defeat the upstart Arabs. The Muslim position benefited from protection on all sides: protecting their rear was the system of Sāsānian fortifications known as the wall of the Arabs (MP War ī Tāzīgān) or the ditch of Shāpūr (Ar. khandaq Sābūr); to their left were sand dunes stretching towards a small lake near present-day Najaf; a thinning extension on the Euphrates River (called al-ʿAtīq) flowed in front of the army, terminating in that lake; and the marshlands of southern Iraq covered the right flank.

At this point, the Muslims sent several envoys to meet with Rostam (and, according to some accounts, with Yazdegerd). These emissaries, notably al-Mughīrah b. Shuʿbah ath-Thaqafī, unnerved the Persian leadership with their shabby and unkempt dress, cavalier and disruptive attitude, and their arrogance and certainty in the strength of their cause. Tearing fine carpets with their swords, piercing cushions and pillows with their spears, and jumping audaciously onto Rostam’s throne, they expressed clearly their rejection of Persian culture and their unwillingness to compromise, despite the generous pecuniary offers to buy them off. Having ominous premonitions, Rostam tried to delay the Battle, but succumbed ultimately to the desire to punish them for their behaviour.

Depiction of the Battle of al-Qādisiyyah from a manuscript of the Persian epic Shāh-nāmeh.
Depiction of the Battle of al-Qādisiyyah from a manuscript of the Persian epic Shāh-nāmeh. [4]
The details of the battle itself are littered with accounts of heroics, extolling the deeds of the Muslim warriors who faced a much larger—in some accounts, by a multiple of ten—Persian host. On the first day, the Persian elephants managed to push back the Arabs, although the latter succeeded ultimately in maintaining their ground. Muslim reinforcements from Syria began arriving on the second day. A ploy by one warrior to feign much larger numbers of arriving troops, did much to boost the morale of the Arab-Muslim army. Another hero led some soldiers in an attack on the elephants, which, when combined with a clever trick—whereby the Arab horses were decorated in costume—succeeded in frightening the Persian elephants. The latter fled, stampeding through the Persian lines and breaking their formations. Almost all accounts agree that Saʿd himself could not take part in the battle, as he was suffering from an ailment that prevented him from mounting a horse. Instead, he oversaw the proceedings from atop the nearby fort of Qudays, commanding the force through his deputy Khālid b. ʿUrfuṭah.

1.2 Arab-Muslim victory and aftermath

The third night, known as the Night of Howling (Ar. laylat al-harīr), saw the Muslims gaining the advantage and a fierce windstorm that commenced on the fourth morning aided them by blowing sand in the faces of the Persian soldiers. Rostam, who directed the Persian army from atop his throne, took shelter in the shade of a mule after the wind knocked the canopy off of his throne and into the ʿAtīq. An Arab soldier, sometimes claimed to be Hilāl b. Alqamah (or Hilāl b. ʿUllāfah), made his way through the broken Persian lines and chanced upon Rostam, when he swung his sword and knocked a sack off the mule and onto the general’s back. Seeing the throne and noticing the garments worn by the man attempting to flee by swimming across the ʿAtīq, Hilāl recognised him as the famous Rostam. Having caught and beheaded him, he exclaimed: By the Lord of the Kaʿbah! This news caused the total collapse of the Sāsānian army, elements of which had already commenced retreat. In the mayhem, a group of several thousand soldiers who had chained themselves together drowned in the ʿAtīq, while the Muslims pursued and killed many others; some accepted defeat and Islam.

Poster for the Egyptian film al-Qādisiyyah (1981).
Poster for the Egyptian film al-Qādisiyyah (1981). [5]
From this Battle, the Arab Muslims gained a large source of loot, including the famed jewel-encrusted royal standard (Pers.: drafsh-e Kāveyān, sometimes translated as the flag of Kāveh). The Arab fighters became known as the people of al-Qādisiyyah (Ar. ahl al-Qādisiyyah’) and held highest prestige (and pay) of the later Arab settlers within Iraq and one of its important garrison town, al-Kūfah.

According to most accounts, Saʿd and his army pursued immediately the fleeing Persian army up to the outskirts of al-Madāʾin, despatching a few smaller forces who attempted to halt them along the way. After a brief (or long) siege, the Arabs succeeded in penetrating first the western parts of the capital and then the eastern parts, as the royal family and nobility fled eastwards, the Persians relinquishing contrôl over Iraq for good. Thus, the Battle of al-Qādisiyyah broke the power of the Sāsānians, opened the way for the swift Arab-Muslim conquest of the alluvial ‘black’ land of central Iraq (known as the Sawād), and enabled the easy capture of the Sāsānian capital. The Muslims continued their campaign later, defeating two Sāsānian attempts at halting their advance attacks at Jalūlāʾ and at Nehāvand, destroying and supplanting ultimately the Iranian empire.

continued on the next page pages 1 | 2 | 3

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Related links

Image credits

  1. Depiction of the Battle of al-Qādisiyyah from a manuscript of the Persian epic Shāh-nāmeh. Source: Wikipedia.
  2. Ruins of the royal palace (Ayvān-e Khosrow) in Madāʾin (Ctesiphon), the Sāsānian capital. Source: Wikipedia.
  3. Map of the strategic position of al-Qādisiyyah. Source: D Gershon Lewental (DGLnotes).
  4. Depiction of the Battle of al-Qādisiyyah from a manuscript of the Persian epic Shāh-nāmeh. Source: British Library (MS. I.O.Islamic 3265 (1614) f. 602r).
  5. Poster for the Egyptian film al-Qādisiyyah (1981). Source: MusicMan.com.

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  • 03 May 2016, 20.00—‘Jews, Christians, and Ottoman society: Minorities under Islam ’ (Second Wind Ministries and Episcopal Student Association): Second Wind Coffee House, 564 Buchanan Ave, Norman, Oklahoma.
  • 14 April 2016, 18.30—‘Israel: Ask me anything ’ (Hillel at the University of Oklahoma): 494 Elm Avenue, Norman, Oklahoma.
  • 01 April 2016, 12.00—‘What makes radical Islam so radical? Understanding radical Islam and Salafism in the Middle East ’ (Cleveland County Democrats Corn Bread and Beans lecture series): West Wind Unitarian Universalist Church, 1309 West Boyd St, Norman, Oklahoma. [Norman Transcript article] [Red Dirt Report article]
  • 17 March 2016, 16.00—‘Epic encounters? Narrative, archetypes, and myth in Islamic historiography ’ (Interdisciplinary Islamic Studies Seminar and Islamic Studies Program lecture series, University of Michigan): International Institute, Room 1644, 1080 S University Ave, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
  • 18 March 2016, 11.00—‘Vernacular Islam ’ (Interdisciplinary Islamic Studies Seminar workshop, University of Michigan): International Institute, Room 1644, 1080 S University Ave, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
  • 06 March 2016, 19.00—‘Reflections on the future: How societies use religion, memory, and conflict to define and maintain their identities ’ (Tulsa Jewish United Fund Campaign kickoff lecture and reception, Jewish Federation of Tulsa): Charles Schusterman Jewish Community Center, Sylvan Auditorium, 2021 E 71st Street, Tulsa, Oklahoma.
  • 29 February 2016, 18.30—‘Israel: Ask me anything ’ (Hillel at the University of Oklahoma): 494 Elm Avenue, Norman, Oklahoma.
  • 08 February 2016, 12.00—‘Israel and the Palestinian territories in 2015—A Retrospective ’ (Center for Middle East Studies brown-bag lecture series, University of Oklahoma): Hester Hall 145, Norman, Oklahoma.
  • 22 November 2015, 08.30—‘From Israelites to Muslims: Biblical paradigms in the Futūḥ literature’ (49th annual meeting of the Middle East Studies Association): Sheraton Denver Downtown Hotel, Denver, Colorado.
  • 09 November 2015, 19.00—‘Recent trends and tensions in Israeli politics and society’ (Jewish University adult education series, Jewish Federation of Greater Oklahoma City): Jewish Federation of Greater Oklahoma City, 710 W Wilshire Blvd, Suite 103, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.
  • 30 October 2015, 08.30—‘The Derafsh-e kāveyān: The Pre-Islamic Iranian national standard in myth, history, and memory’ (8th annual conference of the Association for the Study of the Middle East and Africa): Key Bridge Marriott Hotel, Washington, DC.
  • 20 October 2015, 19.15—‘Israel 101 ’ (Hillel at the University of Oklahoma): 494 Elm Ave, Norman, Oklahoma.
  • 07 October 2015, 20.00—‘The Rise of Islam and the Arab-Islamic conquests in their historical perspective’ (Episcopal Student Association, St Anselm of Canterbury Episcopal Student Center): 800 Elm Avenue, Norman, Oklahoma.
  • 09 September 2015, 15.15 (Panel 16)—‘Symbols of (Iranian) empire: Banners, thrones, carpets, and pearls in Arab-Islamic conquest narratives ’ (7th biennial convention of the Association for the Study of Persianate Societies): Mimar Sinan Fine Arts University, İstanbul, Turkey.
  • 04 May 2015—‘Finding truth in the Futūḥ: Challenges in studying the Arab-Islamic conquests ’ (Department of Near Eastern Studies colloquium series, Cornell University): White Hall, Ithaca, New York.
  • 23 March 2015, 19.00—‘From Protective Edge to pre-emptive elections: Israeli news and analysis ’ (Jewish University adult education series, Jewish Federation of Greater Oklahoma City): Jewish Federation of Greater Oklahoma City, 710 W Wilshire Blvd, Suite 103, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.
  • 16 March 2015, 18.00—‘Radical Islam and the Arab-Israeli conflict’ (‘Arab-Israeli conflict’ guest lecture, Tulane University): Dinwiddie Hall 103G, New Orleans, Louisiana.
  • 14 March 2015, 09.00—‘The (Gem) star-spangled banner yet waves’: Iranian priceless treasures in early Islamic history and memory’, (225th meeting of the American Oriental Society): Crowne Plaza French Quarter, New Orleans, Louisiana.
  • 10 March 2015, 12.00—‘Israeli elections primer: Understanding and interpreting the 17 March 2015 elections ’ (Department of International & Area Studies, University of Oklahoma): Hester Hall 145, Norman, Oklahoma.
  • 08 March 2015, 18.30—‘Israeli culture and cuisine’ (Faculty-in-Residence country culture night, University of Oklahoma): Kraettli Faculty-in-Residence House, Norman, Oklahoma.
  • 11 February 2015, 12.00—‘Narratives of Islamic historiography: Reading historical texts as literature ’ (Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies brown-bag lecture series, University of Oklahoma): Ellison Hall 132, Norman, Oklahoma.
  • 14 December 2014, 09.30—‘Bahāʾīs and Jews in the Holy Land, 1917–1957: Symbiosis and scholarship’ (46th annual conference of the Association for Jewish Studies): Hilton Baltimore, Baltimore, Maryland.
  • 23 November 2014, 14.00—‘Hero and Trickster in early Islamic historiography: The Case of the Qādisiyyah narratives’ (48th annual meeting of the Middle East Studies Association): Marriott Wardman Park Hotel, Washington, DC.
  • 01 November 2014—‘From Settlement to Symbol: al-Qadisiyyah and the dehistoricisation of memory in mediæval narratives, sermons, and poetry’ (7th annual conference of the Association for the Study of the Middle East and Africa): Key Bridge Marriott Hotel, Washington, DC.
  • 31 October 2014—‘Myth and memory in Islamic narratives: Saʿd and Abū Miḥjan at the Battle of al-Qādisiyyah’ (7th annual conference of the Association for the Study of the Middle East and Africa): Key Bridge Marriott Hotel, Washington, DC.
  • 08 August 2014—‘Rostam’s death at al-Qādisiyyah: Early representations of Iranian identity in Islamic narratives’ (10th biennial conference of the International Society of Iranian Studies): Montréal, Québec.
  • 18 April 2014, 12.00—‘The Iran-Iraq war of words: Enlisting nationalism and religion in combat ’ (Center for the Study of Nationalism lecture series, University of Oklahoma): Ellison Hall 132, Norman, Oklahoma.
  • 03 April 2014, 18.30—‘Israel and the US ’ (Foreign Policy Association’s Great Decisions series): Norman Public Library, 225 North Webster Street, Norman, Oklahoma.
  • 15 March 2014—‘Rustam’s death at al-Qādisiyya and the development of an Islamic Iranian identity’ (224th meeting of the American Oriental Society): Pointe Hilton Squaw Peak Resort, Phoenix, Arizona.
  • 08 March 2014, 14.30—‘Iranian and Islamic heritage and the formation of Tajiki national identity ’ (After the Persianate: Cultural heritage and national transformation in modern Iran and India, a conference of the Iranian Studies Program, College of International Studies, University of Oklahoma): Wagner Hall 135, Norman, Oklahoma.
  • 28 February 2014, 18.30—‘The Tumultuous Seventh-Century: The Arab-Islamic conquests and the reshaping of the world ’ (Medieval Fair Lecture Series, Center for Medieval & Renaissance Studies, University of Oklahoma): Norman Public Library, A/B Room, 225 North Webster Street, Norman, Oklahoma.
  • 05 January 2014, 17.00—‘Creating and constructing heroes and anti-heroes in early Islamic historiography ’ (1st meeting of the Iranian Studies Research Group, Institute for the Study of Asia and Africa and the Department of Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies, Hebrew University): Faculty of the Humanities Building 5318, Hebrew University of Jerusalem—Mount Scopus campus, Jerusalem, Israel.
  • 26 December 2013, 18.15—‘The Iran-Iraq war of words, memory, and religious history ’ (Iran Forum, Alliance Center for Iranian Studies, Tel-Aviv University): Gilman Hall 133, Tel-Aviv University, Tel-Aviv, Israel.
  • 22 November 2013—‘"First", "second", and "third" battles of al-Qādisiyyah in Iraq, Palestine, and Syria: Early Islamic history and memory in radical Islamist discourse’ (6th annual conference of the Association for the Study of the Middle East and Africa): Key Bridge Marriott Hotel, Washington, DC.
  • 17 November 2013—‘The Baháʾí faith and the State of Israel ’ (Edmond Baháʾí Center): 321 E Campbell Dr, Edmond, Oklahoma.
  • 18 October 2013, 18.30—‘Jews, Judaism, Israel, and the Middle East ’ (Norman Baháʾí Center): 526 Iowa St, Norman, Oklahoma.
  • 06 October 2013, 12.00—‘Between Egypt, Syria, and the Palestinian Territories: Israel in today’s Middle East’ (Norman Jewish Community Organization): Hillel Building, 494 Elm Ave, Norman, Oklahoma.
  • 03 September 2013, 08.00 (Panel 4)—‘The Death of Rostam: Literary representations of Iranian identity in early Islam ’ (6th biennial convention of the Association for the Study of Persianate Societies): Oriental Institute of Sarajevo and Bosniac Institute, Sarajevo, Bosnia.
  • 01 February 2013, 20.30—‘History of the Baháʾí community in the Holy Land, 1917 to the present’ (Moore Baháʾí Cultural Event): 1516 SW 38th Street, Moore, Oklahoma.
  • 18 January 2013, 12.00—‘An Israeli elections primer: Understanding and interpreting the 22 January 2013 elections ’ (Department of International & Area Studies, University of Oklahoma): Hester Hall, Norman, Oklahoma.
  • 07 January 2013, 18.30—‘The Rise of Jewish national identity in the modern world’ (Israel Cornell Club): Khan Museum of Ḥaderah, ha-Gibborim 74, Ḥaderah, Israel.
  • 08 December 2012, 18.30—‘The Baháʾí faith in the Holy Land and Baháʾí-Israeli relations’ (Norman Baháʾí Center): 526 Iowa St, Norman, Oklahoma.
  • 12 November 2012, 19.00—‘The Art of Zionism: Jewish national identity in the modern world’ (Jewish University adult education series, Jewish Federation of Greater Oklahoma City): 710 W Wilshire St, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.
  • 12 October 2012, 14.15 (Panel 2)—‘History for a purpose: An Analysis of "Ṣaddām’s Qādisiyyah"’ (5th annual conference of the Association for the Study of the Middle East and Africa): Key Bridge Marriott Hotel, Washington, DC.
  • 03 October 2012, 12.00—‘The Bahāʾī faith in Israel and its community’s relations with the Jewish state ’ (JuSt Lunch Brown-Bag Lecture Series, Schusterman/Josey Program in Judaic & Israel Studies, University of Oklahoma): Gittinger Hall 109, 760 Van Vleet Oval, Norman, Oklahoma.
  • 04 June 2008, 12.00—‘History and development of the Bahāʾī faith’ (Senior Adult Department Lecture Series, Leventhal-Sidman Jewish Community Center): 333 Nahanton St, Newton Centre, Massachusetts.
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