Umayyad
From: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
|
Date: 2008
Umayyad , the first Islamic dynasty (661-750). Their reign witnessed the return to leadership roles of the pre-Islamic Arab elite, and the rejuvenation of tribal loyalties. The Banu Ummaya constituted the higher stratum of the pre-Islamic Meccan elite. Having entered into an agreement with Muhammad in 630, they succeeded in preserving their economic influence, and gradually reintegrated into the political power structure. The assassination of Uthman, the third caliph, and a member of the Ummaya, presented the dynamic Ummayad figure of Muawiya the opportunity to challenge the otherwise troubled rulership of Ali. With the death of Ali, Muawiya succeeded in establishing himself as the caliph, making Damascus the capital of the Islamic empire. His efforts concentrated on strengthening his rule by entering into a truce with the Byzantines, renewing tribal alliances and securing the succession of his son Yazid. With the death of Muawiya in 680, Yazid faced the opposition of Husayn, the son of Ali. The resistance and subsequent martyrdom of Husayn at Karbala in a battle where the Ummayad forces outnumbered him and his partisans is the focus of the central yearly Shiite observance of Ashura. Yazid also faced further resistance in the Hijaz (today Saudi Arabia), led by Abdallah ibn az-Zubayr. With his death, the caliphate was transfered to the Marwanid branch of the Banu Ummaya. Abd al-Malik succeeded in consolidating Ummayad rule, and proceeded with a series of administrative reforms including the conversion of the bureaucracy from Greek to Arabic, and the minting of new currency. This consolidation set the stage for the renewal of territorial expansion in Asia and Africa under Walid I (705-15), and the increased military pressure against Byzantium under Sulayman (715-17). Sulayman's successor, Umar II (717-20) unsuccessfully attempted to reverse the course of tribal-based politics in an effort to restore the Islamic political ideal of transcending partisanships. His successors, Yazid II (720-24), Hisham (724-43), and Walid (743-44) pursued the tribal-based territorial conquests. The expansion of the Islamic empire led to the emergence of a substantial class of non-tribal Muslims ( mawali ), who became the base from which anti-Ummayad movements drew their supporters. The most notable of these movements was the Abbasid, which eventually succeeded in toppling the last Ummayad caliph, Marwan II, in 750. A branch of the Ummayad family, led by Abd ar-Rahman ad-Dakhil, was able to reach Cordoba and to reestablish Umayyad rule (780-1031) in Muslim Spain.
Bibliography: See G. R. Hawting, The First Dynasty of Islam (1986).
Author not available, UMAYYAD.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
For permission to reuse this article, contact Copyright Clearance Center.
Related articles from HighBeam Research:
|
ROMAN AND UMAYYAD SETTLEMENTS ON THE KARAK PLATEAU: USING TECHNOLOGY TO DETERMINE SITE LOCATION FACTORS ON A REGIONAL SCALE
Near Eastern Archaeology; 12/1/2004; Green, Mark D; 2319 words;
... the Karak Plateau, Jordan, during the Roman and Umayyad periods. The Karak Plateau, biblical Moab, is ... provides the ideal setting to integrate resource maps generated from satellite images in a regional ... long and often hazardous. During the Roman and Umayyad periods, the average distance to the ...
|
|
Commemorating the Sacred Spaces of the Past: The Mamluks and the Umayyad Mosque at Damascus
Near Eastern Archaeology; 3/1/2004; Walker, Bethany J; 7349 words;
The Umayyad Mosque at Damascus was, and continues to ... have been admired by visitors from the Umayyad period (661-750 CE) until today. Referred ... assembles how many people! (1963: 209). The Umayyad mosque in Damascus, although not one of ...
|
|
The Umayyad congregational mosque of Jarash in Jordan and its relationship to early mosques.(Research)
Antiquity; 6/1/2005; Walmsley, Alan Damgaard, Kristoffer; 6650 words;
... AD 705-715). Urban development in the Umayyad period was not restricted to mosques ... from 'Abd al-Malik until the fall of the Umayyad dynasty in AD 750 is characterised by ... further afield. Right at the end of the Umayyad period a large congregational mosque of ...
|
|
THE UMAYYADS
Middle East; 10/1/2004; Rhodes, Fred; 277 words;
THE UMAYYADS The rise of Islamic art published by Art Books ... International ISBN 1 874044 35 x price 14.95 paperback The Umayyads. The rise of Islamic art offers - through the diversity ... necessary clues to a better understanding of the Umayyad culture. This culture represents the emergence ... the Islamic ...
|
|
The Umayyads.(Brief Article)(Book Review)
The Middle East; 10/1/2004; Rhodes, Fred; 277 words;
... 35 x price 14.95 [pounds sterling] paperback The Umayyads. The rise of Islamic art offers--through the diversity ... necessary clues to a better understanding of the Umayyad culture. This culture represents the emergence of ... of the Islamic art would be laid. The rule of the Umayyad dynasty lasted for less ...
|
|
EXCAVATIONS REVEAL REMAINS OF UMAYYAD MOSQUE
Info-Prod Research (Middle East); 8/19/2005; 53 words;
... excavations carried out by the Department of Antiquities in the Jerash area have revealed remains of a mosque dating back to the Umayyad Islamic era between 724 and 743AD. The excavators unearthed the mosque's walls and foundation. The mosque's area was found ...
|
|
DISCOVERY OF UMAYYAD MOSQUE SHEDS NEW LIGHT ON JERASH HISTORY
Info-Prod Research (Middle East); 8/24/2006; 148 words;
According to "Jordan Times", the discovery of a centuries-old mosque in the heart of the Roman ruins of Jerash is shedding new light on the city's history and the early relations between Muslims and Christians following the 7th century Islamic conquest. Instead, this discovery of the mosque which
|
|
Podium: 'Our enemies aim at the destruction of Arab identity'; From a speech by the President of Syria to the 10th regional congress of the Ba'ath Arab Socialist Party, at the Umayyad's Palace in Damascus.(Features)
The Independent (London, England); 6/8/2005; Assad, Bashar; 331 words;
Byline: BASHAR AL-ASSAD The period since the ninth congress in 2000 has witnessed important political events that has put tremendous pressure on Arab citizens and forced them to an unprecedented re-examination of their convictions and ideas. They have had to revisit their basic beliefs, which have
|
|
(book reviews)
The Journal of the American Oriental Society; 10/1/1996; Gordon, Matthew S.; 1024 words;
Studies on the Umayyad period are rare and for this reason alone ... 724-43), and, shortly thereafter, the Umayyad polity. Blankinship argues co-gently ... invitation to other historians of the Umayyad period to search for a synthesis between ...
|
|
From 'desert castle' to medieval town: Qasr al-Hayr al-Sharqi (Syria).(Research)
Antiquity; 6/1/2005; Genequand, Denis; 4256 words;
... al-Hayr al-Sharqi is one of the so-called Umayyad 'desert castles', a term applied to a ... towards a detailed interpretation of the Umayyad settlement (Grabar et al. 1978). Since ... work has added to our knowledge of the Umayyad settlement at Qasr al-Hayr al-Sharqi ...
|
|
The End of the Jihad State: The Reign of Y Hisham Ibn Abd Al-Malik
Domes; 10/31/1995; Carole Hillenbrand; 1182 words;
... these, after all, are in the very heartland of Umayyad power and not in frontier territory. It is ... them to jihad. What of the place of jihad in Umayyad times? Is it valid to postulate, as Blankinship ... State. His basic premise is ideological: the Umayyad caliphs waged full-scale and unremitting ...
|
|
Arabs, Persians, and the advent of the Abbasids reconsidered.
The Journal of the American Oriental Society; 7/1/1997; Daniel, Elton L.; 5088 words;
... movement? Why did it succeed in toppling the Umayyad regime when so many other efforts had ... Hashimiyya. He also speculates that other anti-Umayyad religious movements, such as the Kharijites ... conclusions at the end of the volume: the Umayyads were brought down by a combination of ...
|
|
Political Turmoil in Al-Andalus in the Time of the Amir 'Abd Allah (888-912): Study of the Revolt of Daysum Ibn Ishaq, Lord of Murcia and Lorca and the Role of 'Umar Ibn Hafsun
The Muslim World; 1/1/2006; Marín-Guzmán, Roberto; 10445 words;
... political unity of al-Andalus and the Umayyad dynasty. Al-Andalus was to reach its climax ... important of the rebels and enemies of the Umayyad dynasty at this time, according to Ibn ... Hafsun was not the only opponent of the Umayyad dynasty. He also managed to have a great ...
|
|
The Ibadi Movement: A Study of its Early Development and Ideas
Domes; 10/31/2003; Al-Naboodah, H.M.; 6788 words;
... al-Zubayr whom they supported against the Umayyads, and whom they later opposed after the ... Basra. While greatly disappointed by the Umayyad rule, this group, at the same time, did ... centers which opposed the rule of the Umayyads. The Ibd sect did not emerge as a fully ...
|
|
The chronology of Capernaum in the early Islamic period.
The Journal of the American Oriental Society; 7/1/1997; Magness, Jodi; 4241 words;
... glazed pottery and Mefjer ware dated to the Umayyad period, the first level in which these types appear is attributed to the Umayyad period. This was then used as a basis for assigning these types to the Umayyad period! In her discussion of Mefjer ware ...
|
See all results from premium newspaper and magazine articles, images, maps and more at HighBeam Research.
Related articles from newspapers, magazines and other sources:
JORDAN: EXCAVATIONS REVEAL REMAINS OF UMAYYAD MOSQUE.
IPR Strategic Business Information Database; 8/19/2005; 53 words;
|
JORDAN: DISCOVERY OF UMAYYAD MOSQUE SHEDS NEW LIGHT ON JERASH HISTORY.
IPR Strategic Business Information Database; 8/24/2006; 148 words;
|
Religious inquisition as social policy: the persecution of the 'Zanadiqa' in the early Abbasid Caliphate.
Arab Studies Quarterly (ASQ); 3/22/1994; Ibrahim, Mahmood; 9435 words;
|
The Shi'a remembrance of Muharram: an exploration of the days of Ashura and Arba'een.
Military Review; 3/1/2007; Pierre, Jean-Marc Hutchinson, Edward Abdulrazak, Hassan; 5517 words;
|
Baer, Eva. The Human Figure in Islamic Art: Inheritances and Islamic Transformations.(Book review)
Journal of Third World Studies; 3/22/2007; Teipen, Alfons H.; 926 words;
|
Background History: The 8th - 20th Century A.D.
APS Diplomat Redrawing the Islamic Map; 11/17/2003; 2036 words;
|
(book reviews)
The Historian; 1/1/1994; Perkins, Kenneth J.; 558 words;
|
The Twelver Shiites.
APS Diplomat Redrawing the Islamic Map; 12/1/2003; 1223 words;
|
Between cult and culture: Bamiyan, Islamic iconoclasm, and the museum.(Afghanistan)
The Art Bulletin; 12/1/2002; Flood, Finbarr Barry; 18459 words;
|
History Of The Sunni-Shi'ite Split.
APS Diplomat Redrawing the Islamic Map; 6/11/2007; 1038 words;
|
|
|